Spying on Twitter and Facebook
Noah Shachtman at Wired.com reports on a business relationship between a segment of the CIA and an Internet company that uses specialized data mining tools to monitor the activity going on in the social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook. Personal privacy laws in the U.S. require the government to use discretion when violating the privacy of U.S. citizens. These social networking sites provide a huge amount of personal information that would not be available, were it not being offered up to the public.
Is this another example of where there is a tension between the potential benefit to security and the potential abuse of privacy? Do users of social networking sites fully understand what will happen to the data they post, and would they alter their behavior if they were made aware? Share your thoughts. Post a comment.
Subscribe to comments via RSS 2.0

