Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

Ghosts in the machine, spooks on the wire

By Jon Espenschied , Computerworld , 10/29/2007
  • Share/Email
  • Comment
  • Print

On the Internet, there's always a ghost in the room -- watching you, listening, recording your activities and interests, aggregating profiles or categorizing you, and whispering secrets and lies about you to others again and again.

It's not paranoia; you can't see them but they are there. "They" are all manner of public and private organizations, some legitimately involved with carrying your voice and data to intended destinations or acquiring records for commercial interests, others just ... listening. (Or, more precisely, sniffing.)

Some spirits -- friendly ghosts, if you like -- are dedicated to tracking actual risks, such as ensuring that stolen or dangerous materials, weapons or criminals are eventually found through their communications and movement. But others keep meticulous surveillance records of imaginary security risks -- U.S. travelers with one too many Canadian pharmacy runs or with a book by Khalil Gibran or Abbie Hoffman in their checked luggage. These are more malevolent entities, and if you saw the movie Poltergeist, you have a good idea of their potential effect on your world.

It's not the silliness of men being pulled off a plane for speaking Arabic that's frightening this Halloween -- it's the insidious seepage of information between federal and corporate databases. Aggregations of unrelated risk criteria or subjective data lead to bogus correlations. Bogus correlations become inaccurate labels. Inaccurate labels become the basis for further labeling and profiling, and eventually a shoddy system breeds data with a ghostly presence of its own -- a specter that can haunt a person's reputation or bring a screeching halt to his or her livelihood.

Watching you

It's no secret that being stupid with a computer these days can get you fired or worse. Anyone living in the year 2007 who's foolish enough to browse lewd materials at work or to plan a crime using a computer at the local library has a nearly inevitable date with the reaper.

But you don't have to be walking on the wild side to attract a tracker, and it doesn't take a high-profile lifestyle to find electronic eyes and ears following you around, collecting information about supposedly-offline activities. Combine it with a legal culture grown increasingly careless about traditional privacy and consumer protections, and the result is enough to give any sensible person the creeps.

  • Share/Email
  • Comment
  • Print
Partner Content

Brilliantly simple security and control solutions for email, web and endpoint

www.sophos.com

Stopping data leakage

Learn how to exploit your current security investment to control the information that flows into, through and out of your network.

Download the white paper.

Why detection rates aren't enough

Evaluating endpoint security products is a time-consuming and daunting task. Learn the six critical questions you need to ask prospective vendors to get the right endpoint solution.

Download the white paper.

Applications: taking back control

Employees installing unauthorized applications is a growing threat to business security and productivity. Cost-effectively reduce this threat by integrating control into your malware protection.

Learn more today.

Comments (1)
Login
Forgot your account info?

RE: Ghosts in the machine, spooks on the wireBy Barry J Bailey on October 31, 2007, 2:51 pmI have to agree that although this is a worse case scenario it is too close to being true. There are databases that track truck drivers across the nation from job...

Reply | Read entire comment

View all comments

Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed