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December 29, 2005
The Circle of Strife
Despite the fact that he apparently despises me, this, by Ethan, is a very good catch:
The National Security Agency's Internet site has been placing files on visitors' computers that can track their Web surfing activity despite strict federal rules banning most files of that type.
The files, known as cookies, disappeared after a privacy activist complained and The Associated Press made inquiries this week. Agency officials acknowledged yesterday that they had made a mistake.
Nonetheless, the issue raised questions about privacy at the agency, which is on the defensive over reports of an eavesdropping program.
"Considering the surveillance power the N.S.A. has, cookies are not exactly a major concern," said Ari Schwartz, associate director at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a privacy advocacy group in Washington. "But it does show a general lack of understanding about privacy rules when they are not even following the government's very basic rules for Web privacy."
The full New York Times article is here. And I can tell you how this debate will go. Whiny al-Qaeda sympathizers like myself will complain that this overreach further underscores the need for oversight of the NSA. Conservatives, in response, will explain that I'm just concerned the Feds will discover my extensive collection of child porn, and that if I and the Democratic Party don't think purveyors of kiddie films and snuff flicks should caught and prosecuted, well, they're anxious to have that debate. Then, Rasmussen Reports will poll the issue, asking:
Should the NSA be allowed to track the web sites visited by suspected terrorists, pedophiles, and perverts?
62 percent of Americans will say yes, the right will crow its victory, the left will poo-poo the numbers, and next week we'll start the cycle all over again.
December 29, 2005 | Permalink
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Comments
Nah, Rasmussen Reports will have a poll in the field tomorrow:
"Do you like cookies?
Yes.
No."
Posted by: Chris R | Dec 29, 2005 12:50:12 PM
well, he calls you an asshole and backs it up with a lot of proof, so, hmm, I guess that kinda sucks for you. I mean, he really got your number, detailing the myriad ways you are an asshole and also describing your clear history of assholity and asshole-related program activities
Posted by: Goldberg | Dec 29, 2005 2:16:59 PM
A slight misfire here; cookies are a non-issue relative to the other privacy-threatening policies of the NSA, and I think mixing them up discredits our position.
Cookies on sites are so very common that it's not unreasonable for some web designer to include them without being told otherwise. They can be used for tracking you to some extent, and having cookies on your machine does mean you lose some anonymity, but the amount of actual information they have is minimal (and also easily neutralized - turn off or clear your cookies).
I hope I don't appear to pedantic here; your key point - about the spin cycle tearing up the civil liberties issues - is all correct.
Posted by: Dev Purkayastha | Dec 29, 2005 2:18:39 PM
The story has little to do with domestic spying and everything to do with people's susceptibility to fear and spin. And it is getting blow way out of proportion by people who do not understand how meaningless it is that the NSA's website used cookies.
Let it go. Focus on something more important and don't get distracted.
Posted by: fiat lux | Dec 29, 2005 2:52:09 PM
Wow, what a harsh and bitchy world this blogging is.
Posted by: pantomimeHorse | Dec 29, 2005 3:16:28 PM
Dev is right. Many web software packages will use cookies by default. My first thought on hearing this news was "did I violate government regs on any federal websites I worked on by using cookies?" Could be -- but take it from a paranoid EFF sympathizer: cookies are not a big deal.
Posted by: tom | Dec 29, 2005 4:52:18 PM
thank you for the link.
i hereby apologize for my earlier aggro.
we're on the same team, etc.
Posted by: ethan | Dec 29, 2005 8:54:11 PM



