Chris Soghoian urged companies to
stop storing private data. He spoke Tuesday morning about the dangers of
government surveillance through corporations and social media companies. The
event was part of a symposium held at the University of Oklahoma titled “The
Future of Privacy in a Socially Networked World”.
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Soghoian works in Washington, D.C. to educate policy makers. PHOTO: Matt Dyer |
Soghoian, Principal Technologist
and Senior Policy Analyst with the Speech, Privacy and Technology Project at
the American Civil Liberties Union, explained that the United States government
legally requires companies to hand over any requested personal information that
clients entrust to them in an effort to monitor criminal activity.
“Something that, 20 years ago,
would have required an FBI agent to go out into the field to discover, can now
be done from the comfort of [an agent’s] desk,” said Soghoian.
Soghoian claims the current
Internet privacy policy is wrong because citizens have no option except to
present their information to companies who have to release it to the
government.
Specifically of Facebook,
Soghoian says, “Their business model is to screw you, and then apologize later.
You don’t have a choice. It’s Facebook or the highway. And that means not
knowing what’s going on.
The issue is not just an
infringement upon personal privacy. Soghoian pointed to China’s recent hacking
of major U.S. companies as well as the 2005 Athen’s Affair where an outside
force hacked the phones of several high-ranking Greek officials including the
prime minister.
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There was limited seating in the Gaylord Auditorium Tuesday. PHOTO: Matt Dyer |
According to socialbakers.com,
over 163 million U.S. citizens have a Facebook profile. Alex Dean, a junior
broadcasting major at OU, is one of them.
“I had just never thought about
how our lack of privacy transcends borders,” says Dean. “Online, we really are
all one nation.”
Soghoian pointed out near the end
of Tuesday’s event that Internet privacy will become more question of foreign
policy and less of civil liberties in the future. More information about
Soghoian’s work can be found at www.aclu.org/protecting-civil-liberties-digital-age.
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