I did read the abcnews.com story and I tried to do so very carefully to try
and determine exactly what Netradar does and does not do.
When the article referred to things Netradar had been used for, it talked
about collective and not individual behavior being monitored. Case in
point:
"...[T]he software was used last year
to search the Internet and give authorities in Seattle an
early warning of demonstrations against the World Trade
Organization."
Now, what does that mean, really? Did Netradar provide a list of names and
addresses of likely participants? I doubt it. However, note what the
article says Netradar uses as input:
"The tool works by scanning public areas on the Internet
- chat rooms, bulletin boards and commercial databases
used in Web marketing..." [italics mine]
Databases like Doubleclick's? I didn't think that would constitute a
"public area."
Don't get me wrong - I think Netradar can be used to greatly advance a wide
range of totalitarian state or corporate agendas - but I think it needs to
be better and more widely understood before we who pay attention to such
things can really formulate a response.
Isn't it interesting how the Internet seems to beg for the existence of both
uncircumventable personal anonymity and authentication??
- Jeff
-----Original Message-----
From: Les Neste [mailto:">lesneste@atlnewmedia.com]
Sent: Thursday, May 18, 2000 3:49 PM
To: ">ale@ale.org
Subject: Re: [ale] netradar: did anyone catch this on abc news?
At 04:00 PM 5/17/2000 -0400, Rod Young wrote:
>>>>
And what can we do to protect ourselves.
<<<<
I didn't see the broadcast but it was discussed on abcnews.com. Brings up a
couple interesting issues. 1) Does existence of netradar create an
opportunity for companies to offer "radar-free discussion groups" 2) Would a
court uphold terms of use for robot visitors to a site as is currently done
with human visitors.
......................................................................
Les Neste
Voice 404-350-3345
Web http://www.mindspring.com/~lesneste -- To unsubscribe: mail
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