Limit Government's Use of Surveillance Technology Before It's Too Late
We can't stop technological advancement, but we should limit government misuse of it.

One of the constant themes in dystopian movies and novels is the idea of the ever-present "surveillance state"—a terrifying world where the authorities are watching our every move via a system of cameras on every street corner. How can we freely live our lives if the State always is monitoring our conversations, ready to whisk us away for some thought crime or indiscretion?
In George Orwell's "1984," Big Brother always is watching. "If you want to keep a secret, you must also hide it from yourself," the novel explains. It's been 75 years since that book's publication—and only 22 years since the cinematic release of "Minority Report," which foresaw a world where the Pre-Crime Department arrested people based on its predictions of future crimes.
In that relatively short time, humanity has become accustomed to a level of technological intrusion that was previously unfathomable. Most of us have mixed feelings. We've seen great advancements in medicine, food production, manufacturing, and information, but our society also has built the infrastructure for a frighteningly intrusive government.
The Los Angeles Times recently reported on one city's typical use of Artificial Intelligence: "On any day in Long Beach, residents encounter dozens of technologies that collect their personal information.… Police patrol cars scan license plates. A camera logs how many vehicles pass through an intersection. Smart water meters track each time a resident turns on their tap. Beachgoers heading to the sand enter their license plate number and credit card information into a mobile app to pay for parking."
That list is a mish-mash of good and potentially worrisome technologies. It's hard to complain about smart meters, which simply are modern versions of meters that water agencies have used for decades to assess use charges. Technology can help the government improve public services. We've all adapted to (and benefit from) the app-based world. There's no going back to an analog time.
Most of us have also invited helpful technologies into our homes ("Alexa, please tell me …") and our cars. I automatically get a Google timeline email that shows me exactly where I've been over the past month and how much time I've spent walking, driving, or sitting on the couch. This is the work of private companies that (usually) have no ulterior motive other than selling us stuff.
The problem—with or without high technology—revolves around government and its access to and use of any such data. It's one thing for a parking company to scan my license plate to facilitate payment—and quite another for the city government to use such technologies to follow my movements or to use iffy face-scan technologies to arrest me.
As the article noted, California has passed two ground-breaking data privacy laws. Yet they seem so typical of our state, which is run by government-expanding progressives who see private firms as the source of every problem. These laws impose significant burdens on companies that are trying to develop and market innovative products. They do nothing to restrict governments from misusing information to undermine our civil liberties.
"In 2020, Long Beach and Pasadena faced scrutiny for sharing data from license plate readers with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency despite pledges not to do so," the article explained. So now Long Beach has developed a "digital rights platform" that, according to its website, will "boost transparency by providing residents with detailed information about the technologies we deploy and how the City uses the data it collects."
The city deserves credit for promoting transparency, but as always cities and other governments need tough restrictions on their ability to track our movements, store the information, and monitor our behavior. We've seen the results of out-of-control government monitoring in countries as diverse as China and Great Britain. Recent local examples should be enough to generate legislative efforts to constrain local and state governments.
Reason's Elizabeth Nolan Brown reported this month that San Diego-area police "are putting up a creepy surveillance tower under the auspice of stopping sex sellers and sex buyers from meeting. The prostitution surveillance tower…will record video of anyone who happens to be in the area." It's silly. Anyone who wants to engage in illegal behavior will be smart enough not to do so in front of that huge structure.
The real concern comes from less obvious, highly intrusive technologies. Police agencies have the habit of pushing the envelope on such matters, after all. The ACLU reports on a case in Massachusetts, where police installed a tiny video device on a utility pole to surveil a family all day. That's a better example of what might be coming. That's what's so worrisome.
Technological advancements are here to stay, but the key to halting the "surveillance state" is to enforce strict limits on government rather than focusing on companies that create technological marvels. Once dystopia arrives, it's too late.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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“before it’s too late” ? My friend, we crossed that line a long time ago.
In the best of all worlds, there would be laws. In the real world, visible organizations will work around the laws and clandestine organizations will ignore them.
The ability to “limit” the establishment from using technology to subjugate the people is a delusion.
They have developed lying for millennia, have laws to cover their tracks, and have demonstrated time and again the willingness to use force to coerce us.
Politics is obsolete. The government IS private oligarchs.
Instead we need to openly embrace surveillance but turn it around TO WATCH THEM. Only this will protect us and cripple their corruption.
WE NEED to make personally recording everything we can witness an inalienable right guaranteed in the constitution.
Inalienable means NOBODY NOWHERE could stop us from recording. The replaying of our recordings would be subject to laws pertaining to free speech.
Try lying now.
" . . . but we should limit government misuse . . . "
You should have written this when you would have used a pen and a piece of paper - - - - - - - - - -
That headline alone was bad enough; the subhead was worse, and I'm not going to waste my time reading the rest. Anyone ignorant enough to think "we" have any control of government is delusional. Anyone ignorant enough to think that a government which defines its own limits will honor any laws limiting its reach is just plain .... well, willfully delusion and ignorant.
Words fail me.
Support the duopoly and this is what you get.
The UK doesn't have a duopoly and they have a much worse surveillance state than we do.
Oranges grow on trees and potatoes grow underground.
"This is the work of private companies that (usually) have no ulterior motive other than selling us stuff."
Or sell the info to government.
Yeah! MAGA! MAGA! and to hell with getting enough votes on a recognizably LP platform to stunt the looters' ability to initiate deadly force.
Whutever happened to all the COVID-whining, girl-bullying, pot busting MAGAts who knew how to add, subtract and divide?
Once dystopia arrives, it's too late.
Meaning, it's too late.
Tyranny, Thy Name Is Government
“Put not your trust in princes,
Nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help.” -Psalms 146:3
Government is the enemy. Always has been. Always will be. Yet, the gullible, ignorant masses turn to government to solve the problems that government itself created.
Forget The Who. The governmental vermin are products of a corrupt system now rotten to the core. Toqueville noted the beginning of the trend in the 1830's.
Forget The What. Politicians bloviating hollow promises that they have no intention of keeping lead only to the bank of the River Styx.
Emphasize The How. How do we reverse the national decline, return to fulfilling the vision of the Founding Fathers, and, once returned, maintain the success? Find a scientifically-based, detailed solution in the unique novel, Retribution Fever. Else wallow in ignorance.
“Every nation has the government for which it is fit.” -Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821)