Catherine Crump: The small and surprisingly dangerous detail the police track about you
Catherine Crump: Malý a prekvapivo nebezpečný detail, ktorý o vás vie polícia
Catherine Crump is an assistant clinical professor at Berkeley Law School who focuses on the laws around data and surveillance. Full bio
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on protestors in Ferguson, Missouri,
proti demonštrantom,
shooting of Michael Brown,
policajt zastrelil Michaela Browna,
military weapons and equipment,
pokročilé armádne zbrane a vybavenie
across the United States.
po celých Štátoch.
with surveillance equipment.
surveillance is enabling
to gather vast quantities
zbierať obrovské množstvá
about each and every one of us
never previously possible.
be very sensitive.
môžu byť veľmi citlivé.
the United States,
to a therapist,
or if you don't go to church.
information about you
about everyone else,
o všetkých ostatných,
a detailed portrait
about what happens behind closed doors.
čo sa deje za zavretými dvermi.
decisions about who they think you are
si robia o vás vlastné závery
driving mass location tracking
masového stopovania
Automatic License Plate Reader.
automatická čítačka ŠPZ.
know what to look for --
on police cars,
capture images of every passing car
vyfotia každé prechádzajúce auto
into machine-readable text
against hot lists
či nie sú na zozname
for wrongdoing.
are keeping records
passes them by,
of mass quantities of data
was happening?
his local police department
vyžiadal od polície
reader data they had on him,
time and location,
photographs that captured
often who he was with.
is a picture of Mike and his two daughters
je Mike so svojimi dvoma dcérami,
in their own driveway.
na vlastnej príjazdovej ceste.
hundreds of photos like this
zachytávajúcich,
in the United States,
that they have photographs
about your daily life.
is keeping all of this information?
že vláda má všetky tieto informácie?
this data has plummeted,
sú dnes také nízke,
simply hang on to it,
one police department
departments are doing it.
individual pots of data,
into one vast database
Federal Drug Enforcement Administration,
pre kontrolu obchodu s drogami,
primarily interested in this,
the existence of this database.
existenciu tejto databázy.
equipped with license plate readers
autami vybavenými čítačkou
figure out who is attending.
kto tam chodieva.
aren't limited to the United States.
nie sú len doménou USA.
on a plate reader watch list
medzi podozrivé ŠPZ,
lawful political demonstrations
zákonných demonštrácií,
and sketch the attendees.
a skicovať prítomných.
only mass location tracking technology
masového stopovania, ktorá je
k dispozícii.
a cell tower dump,
záznamy z veží mobilných operátorov
uncover who was using
at a particular time,
and even hundreds of thousands of people.
do domácností stopovacie signály
can send tracking signals
to identify the cell phones located there.
mobily, ktoré sa tam nachádzajú.
which house to target,
do ktorého domu mieriť,
to drive this technology
high-tech military weapons and equipment,
armádnymi high-tech zbraňami a vybavením,
the United States
po celých Štátoch
we do about this?
civil liberties threat.
vážne ohrozenie občianskych slobôd.
have massive quantities of data,
má polícia kvantá dát
maybe for political advantage,
ide o vyhrážanie alebo politické výhody
be governed by the city councils,
mestským zastupiteľstvám,
about innocent people
o bezúhonných občanoch
uses of the technology to go forward.
len na opodstatnené účely.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Catherine Crump - Attorney + privacy advocateCatherine Crump is an assistant clinical professor at Berkeley Law School who focuses on the laws around data and surveillance.
Why you should listen
Catherine Crump is a civil liberties lawyer whose work focuses on combating government surveillance and protecting the free speech rights of political protesters. She has filed cases challenging the NSA and the Department of Homeland Security. Crump is an assistant professor at Berkeley Law School; previously she was an attorney for ACLU for nine years.
In her writing for the ACLU, Crump warns against the dangers of national mass surveillance technology, which can all too easily end up as tools for local police forces. She writes, "Not only our country as a whole, but also the police, will be better off in the long run if we have an open debate about what today’s technology can do, versus what it should do."
Catherine Crump | Speaker | TED.com