The Washington Post reports that there is a technology used by police
forces called Beware. Beware, marketed by Intrado, profiles the threat level of
a prospect for a police call. Calls to residences are among the most dangerous
for police to answer. Their chances of being in harms way is much higher. So in
addition to its 200 police camera "perched across the city," 800 more from
schools and traffic cameras, and another several hundred worn by officers, the
Fresno Police Department is testing yet another technology that is so invasive
that it assigns a threat level to the person in the house before the police
knock on the door. This is the type of technology used to spy on you every day.
There's more.
The Post reports: "The cameras were only one tool at the ready. Officers
could trawl a private database that has recorded more than 2 billion scans of
vehicle license plates and locations nationwide. If gunshots were fired, a
system called ShotSpotter could triangulate the location using microphones
strung around the city. Another program, called Media Sonar, crawled social
media looking for illicit activity...But perhaps the most controversial and
revealing technology is the threat-scoring software Beware. Fresno is one of the
first departments in the nation to test the program...As officers respond to
calls, Beware automatically runs the addresses...to generate a color-coded
threat level for each person."
Intrado's website describes Beware as: "Accessed through any browser (fixed
or mobile) on any Internet-enabled device including tablets, smartphones, laptop
and desktop computers, Beware® from Intrado searches, sorts and scores billions
of publicly-available commercial records in a matter of seconds - alerting
responders to potentially dangerous situations while en route to, or at the
location of, a 9-1-1 request for assistance." It actually assigns a threat level
of green, yellow, or red. But the company secret is how Beware scores an
individual to assign the threat level, and its accuracy. A Fresno City
Councilman had his threat level run and his home was rated yellow because of a
previous resident, the Post reported.
Protecting police officers from unnecessary risk is important. Protecting
personal privacy is a Constitutional requirement. Instead of being stewards of
public property, such as roads, parks, schools, government buildings and the
like, the government--local, state, and federal--has become dictator over public
property. There is a big difference between a steward and a dictator. Under the
deceptive guise of protection, your rights, your religious beliefs, your ability
feel secure in the privacy of your home, can be violated by the all-knowing
government. Exodus 20:3 says, "Thou shalt have no other gods before me."
Government is not God. We should ensure that it understands that while we still
have a
say.
Bill Wilson
www.dailyjot.com
www.dailyjot.com
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