Category Archives: identity

“Pre-crime” being developed by Homeland Security

CNET reports that the Department of Homeland Security is developing a technology to predict intent through monitoring behavioral changes.

This could be used for all sorts of benign things, like a police officer approaching your car and knowing whether or not you were about to do something rash—he can brace himself before you get too close. The article also cites uses in high traffic events or at border crossings where behavioral analysis can aid in law enforcement.

One can’t help but wonder about the privacy implications this will entail. DHS has said that the system doesn’t store any personally-identifiable information about individuals, but it does require that information to function. Hopefully this system won’t garner the same omniscient status as had the pre-cogs in Spielberg’s film. But even in that case, this system, as any computer system, could be exploited in myriad ways. The technology is only useful within safe, reasonable limits that respect our privacy and agency as human beings.

Compiling my digital history

You can get a pretty interesting and comprehensive picture of my online life if you look at the things I write, share, like, tweet, and bookmark. The problem is that all of that information is distributed throughout the internet in various silos, like Facebook, Twitter, Last.fm, Tumblr, and Google. Thanks to things like RSS and Atom, it’s possible to get (most of) that information out of the silos into a machine-readable format. But I still have the issue of compiling it all.

I’ve been using the iOS app Momento for a few weeks now. It does a laudable job of collecting all my activity into one place. Several of the services are built in, like Facebook and Twitter, while a multitude of others are supported via the “web feeds” option. Momento imports these all, ties them to the date on which they occurred, and labels them. I can even add “diary entries” right into the app to provide more context.

The interesting thing about Momento is that it runs entirely on my iPod–none of the aggregated data is stored on Momento’s servers. I have a local copy of everything and that’s it. I can back that up to my computer via iTunes and do whatever I want with it.

Even still, however, Momento is a sort of silo. I can only access its data on my device. This solution isn’t perfect, but it’s a start. It gets me a step closer to having a personal data store where everything I do or post online is under my control.