I don't know about you, but I tend to think of myself as being rather anonymous. I have a large family and a circle of friends, but I live on the dividing line between two cities which together have a quarter million residents. I'm a small fish in a pretty good-sized pond. When I go out, I don't expect to see anyone I know.
So my sense of anonymity was a little disrupted today as I read an article in the Chicago Tribune called "Data Tracks." (http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/chi-0305090364may11,1,2664836.story) I know that business and government have been able to track us for ages. I guess I've been fairly complacent about it, because I didn't have anything to hide. But the amount of information being collected on us has increased exponentially.
We have something on Illinois tollways called I-pass. With it, you can drive through tollbooths without stopping, as it makes note of your car and the time, and deducts from your account. The record of your travels is not readily available, but it can be supoenaed in court cases.
When you use your phone, a record is kept of the time and the number called. As you walk in the city, security devices now film you using digital cameras. When you shop at large grocery stores , a list of your purchases and the day you shop is stored in their computers. Each time you use your charge card, the item, shop and date is kept. A withdrawal at an ATM causes MORE records to be entered, and a CTA card keeps track of your travels. If you use a car rather than public transportation, gas stations note where you have been. Libraries are tracking the interests of their users with computers, now. Both checks and credit cards track our spending.
We've all known that our personal information is out there on the web. I get calls or e-mails from companies who have researched my mortgage and want to entice me with a lower rate. My credit rating is available to anyone clever enough to request it. The federal government is putting everything on computer so that they can compare your taxes to the W2s and company pay records. State Unemployment divisions work with Social Security to be sure the appropriate name and number match contributions being made.
So....I guess I'm a rather public property these days. I hate to be paranoid, but I wonder how this might be used against me some day. Who needs all this data? Why are they saving it? I can understand L.L.Bean tracking my purchases, but it's shocking when the local Chinese restaurant does the same thing.
And, having said all this, I doubt seriously there is any way for me to stop this tracking. Maybe I need to start riding my bike more, and pay strictly by cash....
Comments (5)
Scary ain't it? Big brother has been watching us all for quite some time. It almost makes me want to be a law-abiding citizen, or something... :0)
Posted by -=e=- | May 12, 2003 12:50 AM
Posted on May 12, 2003 00:50
Law abiding?? There's a novel thought! *G*
Posted by Buffy | May 12, 2003 8:24 AM
Posted on May 12, 2003 08:24
I think all you would have to do is deal strictly in cash transactions, or create a fake identity. You don't have to give up the car, I don't think...
Interesting post though...
Posted by Mad Bull | May 12, 2003 1:32 PM
Posted on May 12, 2003 13:32
The upside of all this is an eventual notoriety. After all, fame comes in different forms. Guess I have fame even if I don't have fortune.
Posted by Roberta | May 12, 2003 3:43 PM
Posted on May 12, 2003 15:43
Hi!
I am doing a college research paper for one of my classes on the potential miss-use of the I-Pass that could invade our privacy. I was just wandering if there were any one who would know any websites so that I can finbd data about this topic. Thank you! P.S. Please E-mail darrell.olson@highland.edu
Posted by Darrell Olson | June 24, 2004 6:29 PM
Posted on June 24, 2004 18:29