ACLU Sets New "Surveillance Society Clock" At Six Minutes Before Midnight (9/17/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON – The American Civil Liberties Union today announced the
launch of a new "Surveillance Society Clock" to symbolize the
reality that we are fast approaching a genuine surveillance society in the
United States. The clock is set at six minutes before the "midnight" of a dark end to
privacy. Also being released is a new report summarizing the state of privacy
today and the video of a new piece about surveillance by spoken-word artists
Steve Connell & Sekou (tha misfit).
"We are rapidly moving toward a future
where our every move, our every transaction, our every communication is tracked
and may be used against us," said Barry Steinhardt, director of the ACLU’s Technology and
Liberty Project. "Too often that big picture is lost amid the stream of
daily privacy stories. The Surveillance Clock is part of our efforts to keep
people focused on that big picture and dramatize what’s happening to
America."
In conjunction with the clock, the ACLU released "Even Bigger, Even
Weaker: The Emerging Surveillance Society." A follow-up to the
ACLU’s
widely cited 2003 report "Bigger Monster, Weaker Chains," the new paper
provides an update on how diverse developments in technology, law and government
are working together to bring us toward a surveillance society.
The ACLU also released a video of "Monster Among
Us," a
spoken-word performance piece dramatizing the growing surveillance society,
which Connell & Sekou wrote for the ACLU.
"The trend toward greater tracking and
surveillance of individuals has intensified rapidly in recent years," said Steinhardt.
"National identity systems, mass surveillance and data
mining, the NSA’s warrantless surveillance program, DNA data-banking,
search engines that store our every query, even satellites – it’s worse than
ever."
The ACLU also made available Web buttons that individuals can put on their
own Web sites to spread the word about out-of-control surveillance.
The ACLU said it would push the clock forward or back in response to
developments that worsen or improve the movement toward mass surveillance. The
Surveillance Society Clock was inspired by the "Doomsday
Clock"
created in 1947 by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists to warn about the
potential for nuclear war.
"The United States is at a crucial
crossroads," said Steinhardt. "As Americans, we
must rise to the challenge, confront the implications of new technologies before
it’s
too late, and protect the privacy that Americans have always valued."
The Surveillance Society Clock, Report and Video are available
online at: www.aclu.org/clock
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