U.S. national debate topic, 2015-2016. Surveillance /
US national debate topic, 2015-2016. Surveillance United States national debate topic, 2015-2016. Surveillance Surveillance
[compiled by H. W. Wilson].
- xi, 185 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
- The reference shelf ; volume 87, number 3 .
- Reference shelf ; v. 87, no. 3. .
Series previously published by H. W. Wilson, a division of EBSCO Information Services.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
National security versus personal privacy. The digital invasion: privacy versus secrecy in the digital age -- NSA spying: it didn't start with 9/11 / US Privacy Board dissenters defend balancing act of NSA surveillance / Privacy watchdog says NSA spying legal, effective / Privacy advocates say NSA reform doesn't require "technological magic" / Personal privacy is only one of the costs of NSA surveillance / U.S. spy agency reports improper surveillance of Americans / NSA sued by Wikimedia, rights groups over mass surveillance / The new surveillance normal: NSA and corporate surveillance in the age of global capitalism / Legislation and policy. The politics of surveillance: a brief history -- The business of surveillance / N.S.A. latest: the secret history of domestic surveillance / Scholars explain failures in oversight of domestic spying / A new legal theory for the age of mass surveillance / Newly revealed NSA program (CREACH) extends NSA's reach even further / Who can control N.S.A. surveillance? / Administration highlights surveillance reforms / How big business is helping expand NSA surveillance, Snowden be damned / Technology. Big brother tech: the technology of mass surveillance and privacy -- New surveillance technology can track everyone in an area for several hours at a time / Domestic drone bills seek to protect privacy rights / Will police body cameras usher in a new surveillance regime? / It costs the government just 6.5 cents an hour to spy on you / Visit the wrong website, and the FBI could end up in your computer / Silicon Valley's surveillance cure-all: transparency / In surveillance debate, White House turns its focus to Silicon Valley / Obama heads to tech security talks amid tensions / Effectiveness of domestic surveillance in fighting crime and terror. Evaluating federal surveillance programs: a difficult task -- The whole haystack / The militarization of domestic surveillance is everyone's problem / Uncle Sam's databases of suspicion / ISIS online: a pretext for cyber COINTELPRO? / The FBI keeps arresting hapless jihadi fanboys and calling them ISIS recruits / What guilty verdict in Silk Road trial might mean for internet freedom / Racial, ethnic, and political profiling. Who to watch?: racial, ethnic, and political profiling in surveillance -- Racial profiling reported in NSA, FBI surveillance /Tom Risen -- Spying on Occupy activists: how cops and Homeland Security help Wall Street / The history of surveillance and the black community / A racial "big brother" debacle: why is the government spying on Black Lives Matter protests? / Black America's state of surveillance / Jack Kenny -- Spencer Ackerman -- Tom Risen -- Sara Sorcher -- Kim Zetter -- David Lerman -- David Ingram -- David H. Price -- Heidi Boghosian -- John Cassidy -- Beth McMurtrie -- Michael Phillips -- Nadia Kayyali -- Mattathias Schwartz -- Josh Gerstein -- Lee Fang -- Craig Timberg -- Preston Maddock -- Gerry Bello -- Drew F. Cohen -- Kevin Poulsen -- Joshua Kopstein -- David E. Sanger -- David E. Sanger and Nicole Perlroth -- Mattathias Schwartz -- Michael German -- Hina Shamsi and Matthew Harwood -- Eric Draitser -- John Knefel -- Cristina Maza -- Matthew Rothschild -- Nadia Kayyali -- Heather Digby Parton -- Malkia Amala Cyril. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Examines the National Forensic League's 2015/16 Policy Debate, which answers the question: "Should the United States substantially curtail domestic surveillance?" From Edward Snowden's controversial NSA leaks to ongoing arguments regarding domestic surveillance drones and police body cameras, the topic of government surveillance on U.S. citizens is thoroughly explored in this volume. Articles investigate such key issues as the legality of domestic surveillance, the right to privacy-and to what extent citizens can expect privacy in the digital age and in the context of the "war on terror"-as well as the relative effectiveness of the program in counter-terrorism efforts and matters of national security. Articles also weigh the economic costs of the program to federal and local governments and uncover the history of domestic surveillance and how it has evolved over time in light of complex developments in both international relations and technology.--Provided by publisher
9781619256927 1619256924
United States. National Security Agency/Central Security Service.
Electronic surveillance--Government policy--United States. Government information--Access control--United States. Privacy, Right of--United States. Police patrol--Surveillance operations.--United States