I.
Why is the United States government spending millions
of dollars to track down critics of George W. Bush in the press?
And why have major American universities agreed to put this technology
of tyranny into the state's hands?
At the most basic level, of course, both questions
are easily answered: 1) Power. 2) Money. The Bush administration
wants to be able to root out - and counteract - any dissenting noises
that might put a crimp in its ongoing crusade for "full spectrum
dominance" of global affairs, while the august institutions
of higher learning involved - the universities of Cornell, Pittsburgh
and Utah - crave the federal green that keeps them in clover.
But beyond these grubby realities, there are many
other disturbing aspects of this new program - which is itself only
part of a much broader penetration of American academia by the Department
of Homeland Security.
As with so many of the Bush measures that have
quietly stripped away America's liberties, this one too is beginning
with a whimper, not a bang: a modest $2.4 million Department of
Homeland Security grant to develop "sentiment analysis"
software that will allow the government's "security organs"
to sift millions of articles for "negative opinions of the
United States or its leaders in newspapers and other publications
overseas," as the New York Times reported earlier this month.
Such negative opinions must be caught and catalogued because they
could pose "potential threats to the nation," security
apparatchiks told the Times.
This hydra-headed snooping program is based on
"information extraction," which, as a chipper PR piece
from Cornell tells us, is a process by which "computers scan
text to find meaning in natural language," rather than the
rigid literalism ordinarily demanded by silicon cogitators. Under
the gentle tutelage of Homeland Security, the universities "will
use machine-learning algorithms to give computers examples of text
expressing both fact and opinion and teach them to tell the difference,"
says the Cornell blurb.
At this point, the ancient and ever-pertinent
question of Pontius Pilate comes to mind: "What is truth?"
Of course, Pilate, being a devotee of what George W. Bush likes
to call "the path of action," gave the answer to his philosophical
inquiry in brute physical form: truth is whatever the empire says
it is - so take this Galilean rabble-rouser out and crucify him
already. In like manner, it will certainly be the government "security
organs" who ultimately determine the criteria for what is fact
and what is opinion - and whether the latter is positive or negative,
perhaps even a candidate for the Bush-Pilate "path."
The academics will be trying out the Sentiment
Analysis program (let's call it SAP, for short) on four main clusters
of articles from 2001-2002, the Times reports. These include: Bush's
famous declaration of an "axis of evil" threatening the
world; the treatment of his Terror War captives in Guantanamo Bay;
global warming; and the failed Bush-backed bid to topple Venezuela's
Hugo Chavez in a coup - all of them issues on which the Bush administration
was at odds with much of the world, and large swathes of American
opinion as well. Obviously, such issues are fertile fields for terrorist
thought-crimes to be snagged and tagged by SAP.
For those with concerns about civil liberties,
Cornell assures us that SAP will be limited strictly to foreign
publications. Oh, really? Hands up out there, everyone who believes
that this technology will not be used to ferret out "potential
threats to the nation" arising in the Homeland press as well.
After all, the Unitary Executive Decider-in-Chief has already decided
that the nation's iron-clad laws against warrantless surveillance
of American citizens can be swept aside by his "inherent powers"
if he decides it's necessary. Why should he bother with any petty
restrictions on a press-monitoring program? And wouldn't dissension
within the ranks of the volk itself actually be more threatening
to government policy than the grumbling of malcontents overseas?
II.
Then again, what is so sinister about the plan,
exactly? Surely every government is eager to read its notices in
the press, foreign and domestic. Surely the Bush administration
already has myriad minions in the White House, the CIA, the NSA,
the DIA and embassies around the world doing just that. True enough
- and there's the rub. For if they are already tracking and sifting
media sentiment to a fare-thee-well, why do they need SAP's $2.4
million software?
Here we see the same principle that lies behind
Bush's illegal warrantless surveillance program. Long-established
law - the FISA court - already provides Bush with the power to spy
on anyone even remotely suspected of a connection to terrorism -
and to do so immediately, without waiting a single instant or jumping
through a single bureaucratic hoop to get the operation going. So
who is he actually using his warrantless surveillance program against?
It can't be suspected terrorists; they are already covered by existing
law. There are only two conclusions to be drawn from this strange
state of affairs: 1) The Bush regime is using the program to spy
on people other than suspected terrorists. 2) It is using the program
to establish the principle that presidential power cannot be restrained
by law in any area that the president arbitrarily designates a "matter
of national security." These conclusions are not mutually exclusive,
of course.
Likewise, we must ask: who is the "Sentiment
Analysis" program aimed at? It can't be the major news and
opinion drivers in the international and national media; these are
already being monitored. And it hardly requires a deus ex machina
to determine the political sentiment behind news stories and opinion
pieces. Why then would you need multimillion-dollar computer whizbangery
to tell you whether a story casts a favorable or critical light
on Bush and his policies? And how could critical "sentiment"
in the kinds of stories that Cornell, Pitt and Utah are examining
in their tests pose any kind of "potential threat" to
the nation? Again, there must be something else behind the program
because, as with warrantless surveillance, it is clearly redundant
on its face.
The key to this conundrum mostly likely lies in
the envisioned scope of the program: "millions of articles"
to be processed for "sentiment analysis." This denotes
a fishing expedition that goes far beyond the "publicly available
material, primarily news reports and editorials from English-language
newspapers worldwide" that Claire Cardie, Cornell's lead researcher
on SAP, says that her team will be using in developing the software.
The target of such a scope cannot be simply the English-language
foreign press, or the foreign press as a whole, or indeed, every
newspaper in the world, from Pyongyang to Peoria. It must also be
aimed at other modes of textual communication, in print and online.
In fact, later in the PR blurb, Cardie rather
gives the game away when, seeking to allay "fears about invasions
of privacy" raised by the research, she notes that "the
techniques would have to be changed considerably to work on documents
like e-mails." Yes; and an intercontinental ballistic missile
is just a big,
shiny, harmless rocket - until you load it with a nuclear weapon
and fire it at somebody. No doubt Cardie is simply a dedicated scientist,
focused on the technical problem at hand, and her naivetè on this
point is genuine; but once you have built a platform that can churn
through millions of pieces of text to uncover criticism and dissent
- however the organs deign to define these concepts - then this
technology can certainly be adapted to launch all-encompassing "sentiment
analysis" against any form of written communication you please.
Nor is this program being developed in isolation.
It is part of a larger Homeland Security push "to conduct research
on advanced methods for information analysis and to develop computational
technologies that contribute to securing the homeland," as
a DHS press release puts it, in announcing the formation of yet
another university consortium. This group - led by Rutgers, and
including the University of Southern California, the University
of Illinois and, once again, Pitt - has pulled down a whopping $10.2
million to "identify common patterns from numerous sources
of information" that "may be indicative of" - what
else? - "potential threats to the nation."
This research program will draw on such areas
as "knowledge representation, uncertainty quantification, high-performance
computing architectures" - and our old friends, information
extraction and natural language processing. It is in fact closely
associated with the "sentiment analysis" work being done
by the Cornell group - and note that the Rutgers consortium is designing
its info-gobbling software to deal with "numerous sources"
of information. Do we sense some synergy going on here?
III.
The Cornell and Rutgers groups are two of four
"University Affiliate Centers" thus far established by
Homeland Security. All of the consortiums are geared toward the
amassing, storing and analysis of unimaginably vast amounts of information,
gathered relentlessly from a multitude of sources and formats. They
are in turn just part of a still-larger panorama of "data mining"
programs being developed - or already in use - by the security organs.
These include the "Analysis, Dissemination,
Visualization, Insight and Semantic Enhancement" (ADVISE) program,
which can rip and read mountains of open source data - such as web
sites and databases, as analyst Michael Hampton reports. Two Democratic
Congressmen, David Obey of Wisconsin and Martin Slabo of Minnesota,
have asked the General Accounting Office to investigate the program
for possible intrusions on privacy rights, Hampton notes.
While Congressional concern for privacy is all
well and good, we know that it means nothing to the Unitary Executive.
Earlier this month, Bush used his "signing statement"
magic wand to wave away a direct Congressional mandate for reports
on whether Homeland Security is obeying privacy laws in compiling
its secret "watch lists," which increasingly control more
and more aspects of American life, including "who gets on planes,
who gets government jobs, who gets employed," as Marc Rotenberg,
executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center,
told AP. Using the by-now ritualistic language of presidential dictatorship,
Bush's statement said he would ignore Congress's direct order and
delay, alter or simply quash the privacy reports as he saw fit.
You don't need a machine-learning algorithm or
$2.4 million worth of Ivy League software to connect the dots here.
The Bush administration already has spyware devouring reams of private
information in every direction. It is now paying top universities
millions of dollars to refine this data into actionable intelligence
- including the automated discernment and tracking of dissent against
administration policies and criticism of the president. Bush has
openly declared that he has no intention of obeying privacy laws
- or any other laws safeguarding the Constitutional rights of American
citizens - if he doesn't want to.
And if that's not sinister enough for you, consider
this: on Tuesday George W. Bush signed the "Military Commissions
Act," which states that he can arbitrarily declare anyone -
yes, American citizens included - an "unlawful enemy combatant"
for any action that he arbitrarily decides constitutes "material
support" to terrorists. He can imprison these "UECs"
without charge or trial, for the duration of the "War on Terror,"
which he and Dick Cheney have already assured us will not end "in
our lifetime." He can subject these captives to "strenuous
interrogation techniques" that by any sane reckoning constitute
torture - but this same Act allows Bush himself to determine what
is legally torture and what is not, except in the most extreme cases,
such as rape and deliberate murder.
A regime openly committed to wielding arbitrary
power over the life and liberty of every person on earth is now
equipping itself with intrusive technology beyond the wildest dreams
of the most totalitarian states in history. And some of the nation's
most respected educational institutions - proud bastions of civilization
and enlightenment - are helping them do it. It is simply impossible
that such a system will not be mightily abused.
And for all you SAP machines out there: that conclusion
is a fact, not an opinion.
Chris Floyd is an American journalist and Truthout
UK Correspondent. His work has appeared in print and online in venues
all over the world, including The Nation, Counterpunch, Columbia
Journalism Review, the Christian Science Monitor, Il Manifesto,
the Moscow Times and many others. He is the author of Empire
Burlesque: High Crimes and Low Comedy in the Bush Imperium,
and is co-founder and editor of the "Empire
Burlesque" political blog. He can be reached at [email protected]. |