The Day

Online privacy is gone, so just deal with it

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Feeling

aggrieved over reports of widespread government surveillan­ce? Feeling guilty about not feeling aggrieved? Relax. There’s little you can do about the revelation­s.

But here are seven steps to help adjusting to a world in which the government has the ability to collect and recall your every keystroke:

1) Admit thatweare powerless to stop this new technology. (We don’t have to like it.)

2) Stop confusing capabiliti­es with actions. The U.S. government is capable of leveling Mount Rushmore. That does not mean it has any intention of launching drone attacks on South Dakota, no matter what your local tea party chapter says.

3) Recognize that this surveillan­ce is key to national security. Former FBI Director Robert Mueller was not alone in warning that a cyberthrea­t will “equal or even eclipse the terrorist threat.” Other government­s and bad people are racing for domination.

Whetherwet­rust government, don’t trust government or simply want more oversight, this is serious business. It’s hard to counthow many bloggers have likened the sort of informatio­n being culled today with the late FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover’s collecting nudie photos of political leaders in compromisi­ng situations. Those were relatively innocent days.

4) Appreciate thatwedo have safeguards. Whenthe Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court berates theNSAfor violating the rules, that’s an example of checks and balances in action. China and Russia pass on such niceties as surveillan­ce courts, and they want to do exactly what the National Security Agency does (if they don’t already).

5) Admit that commercial spying is a privacy matter, as well. Retailers follow your cellphone around the mall. Macy’s knowshowmu­ch time you spent in the shoe department. Amazon.com knows all about your interest in socialism and passion for manga cartoons.

Of course, the telecom companies knowwhomyo­u called and forhow long. If the issue is privacy, what makes a business conglomera­te

FROMA HARROP

more honorable than the government?

6) Call out media sources hurling thunderbol­ts atNSAspyin­g while spying on you.

TheNewYork Times recently ran a red-hot editorial railing over the agency’s “inexhausti­ble appetite for delving into the communicat­ions of Americans.” On the right side of the editorial’sWebpage was a list of article links labeled “Recommende­d for You.” Now, howwould TheNew York Times know what Froma might want to read?

Asearch by Ghostery, a browser extension that looks for third-party elements onWebpages, identified no fewer than 11 invisible entities tracking or analyzing the editorial’s readers. They included advertiser­s— DoubleClic­k, Google AdSense, Moat— and three companies I never heard of doing “analytics.” Naturally, the Facebook Connect widget was watching me, too.

The British newspaper The Guardian fancies itself the last bulwark against privacy oblivion. But over at the Daily Banter website, Bob Cesca reported finding 92 suchWebbug­s embedded on the Guardian page featuring a Glenn Greenwald post on the NSA’s alleged crimes.

7) In assessing government surveillan­ce activities, distinguis­h between a “who” and an “it.” A computer is an “it.” The fact that it is ruffling through all the metadata -- phone numbers, email addresses, Internet searches -- or even keeping the content of such communicat­ions in a vault for five years should not overly concern us.

Whenan actual human being takes a look, then it’s time for questions. Whenthe system works properly, theNSAstil­l needs a warrant to look at content.

I hope these seven steps help. We recently learned that theNSAhas cracked the encryption tools protecting the privacy of Internet communicat­ions. Tworespons­es: 1) Now weknow it can be done. 2) Better us than them.

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