The Trump administration’s ongoing efforts to combine access to the sensitive and personal information of Americans into a single searchable system with the help of shady companies should terrify us – and should inspire us to fight back.

While couched in the benign language of eliminating government “data silos,” this plan runs roughshod over your privacy and security. It’s a throwback to the rightly mocked “Total Information Awareness” plans of the early 2000s that were, at least publicly, stopped after massive outcry from the public and from key members of Congress.

Under this order, ICE is trying to get access to the IRS and Medicaid records of millions of people, and is demanding data from local police. The administration is also making grabs for food stamp data from California and demanding voter registration data from at least nine states.

Much of the plan seems to rely on the data management firm Palantir, formerly based in Palo Alto. It’s telling that the Trump administration would entrust such a sensitive task to a company that has a shaky-at-best record on privacy and human rights.

Bad ideas for spending your taxpayer money never go away – they just hide for a few years and hope no one remembers. But we do. In the early 2000s, when the stated rationale was finding terrorists, the government proposed creating a single all-knowing interface into multiple databases and systems containing information about millions of people. Yet that plan was rightly abandoned after less than three years and millions of wasted taxpayer dollars, because of both privacy concerns and practical problems.

It certainly seems the Trump administration’s intention is to try once again to create a single, all-knowing way to access and use the personal information about everyone in America. Today, of course, the stated focus is on finding violent illegal immigrants and the plan initially only involves data about you held by the government, but the dystopian risks are the same.

Over fifty years ago, after the scandals surrounding Nixon’s “enemies list,” Watergate, and COINTELPRO, in which a President bent on staying in power misused government information to target his political enemies, Congress enacted laws to protect our data privacy. Those laws ensure that data about you collected for one purpose by the government can’t be misused for other purposes or disclosed to other government officials with an actual need. Also, they require the government to carefully secure the data it collects. While not perfect, these laws have served the twin goals of protecting our privacy and data security for many years.

Now the Trump regime is basically ignoring them, and this Congress is doing nothing to stand up for the laws it passed to protect us.

But many of us are pushing back. At the Electronic Frontier Foundation, where I’m executive director, we have sued over DOGE agents grabbing personal data from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, filed an amicus brief in a suit challenging ICE’s grab for taxpayer data, and co-authored another amicus brief challenging ICE’s grab for Medicaid data. We’re not done and we’re not alone.

  • heyWhatsay@slrpnk.net
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    3 hours ago

    This combined with AI facial recognition, the US will be following China’s example.

    The only difference is that their database will be hacked by other countries.

    • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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      6 minutes ago

      Under this admin, you just already know the thing is going to be a horrible hodgepodge mess of code generated by Grok or ChatGPT and put together as cheaply and quickly as possible.

  • ShittDickk@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    They’ll contract musk to do it and call it X Internal Communications or XIC for short, and no one will be able to do trade or business without it.

  • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 hours ago

    Of course. Funnel all that info to Peter fucking Thiel’s Palantir surveillance company that also has contracts with international law enforcement.

    There couldn’t possibly be any problems with funnelling every bit of panopticon into a single billionaire super lobbiest’s hands. Especially one that has openly stated that he doesn’t believe in the continuation of the human race. Who is the closest thing to a real life vampire, regularly getting blood transfusions from healthy young “blood boys” in a hare brained attempt to prolong his own life at all costs.

    I find it a massive failure of society as a whole that this fucking charlatan wasn’t laughed out of society in the 2010s when he was doing interviews about the “blood boy” bullshit and all the other crackpot shit he was doing to prolong his life. Absolute fucking ghoul. The people in power value money more than sense.

  • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 hours ago

    i can’t wait until the pictures of my asshole are finally immortalized in a dark web database leak torrent of the entire government

  • brachiosaurus@mander.xyz
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    7 hours ago

    The Trump administration’s ongoing efforts to combine access to the sensitive and personal information of Americans into a single searchable system with the help of shady companies should terrify us – and should inspire us to fight back.

    We should indeed fight back against the governments and corporations that for decades have been doing this shit.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010s_global_surveillance_disclosures

    • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      It was always a projection. Sure as shit, if a party ever created a one-world-government it would be the conservatives.

  • goreddityourself@lemmy.wtf
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    9 hours ago

    That was the whole point of DOGE. Access to the main servers of every government department, not “efficiency”. If this data is combined with data from social media, it’s possible to make quite detailed profiles of people.
    Let’s not forget Peter Thiel and the Mercers have been doing this since Brexit.
    Also scary that Palantir got a big contract for the NATO.

  • Lady Butterfly she/her@reddthat.com
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    5 hours ago

    It depends on the situation. Better information sharing is important for protecting vulnerable people and children. However, we absolutely shouldn’t have every agency accessing sensitive information like medical records just cos they want to.

  • sunbytes@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    They for sure won’t get hold of any notes about medical conditions (or god forbid, notes from your therapist) and use them against you if you opposed them.

    • Basic Glitch@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      6 hours ago

      I mean also the fact that they’re targeting youth specifically. I worry they will try to remove kids from homes and claim that parents who allow kids to transition are harmful to their own children.

      I’m just beyond not thinking worst case scenario at this point.

  • XenGi@feddit.org
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    20 hours ago

    There are reasons why it is illegal for the german state to have a central database of all it’s citizens. Guess what the US will do with such a thing when they have it…