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tv   Fox News Reporting  FOX News  June 16, 2013 9:00pm-10:00pm EDT

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>> samuel morris officially
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opened his first telegraph line between here and baltimore in 1844. the first message he transmitted four words from the old testament, what hath god wrought? today we might wonder what has samuel morris wrought. we have personal phones and other devices and almost continuous trail of electronic data that information can be scored who knows where analyzeed by who knows whom and who knows what purpose. >> we learned how our government is tapping into a lot of that data phone records e-mails and web postings often provided by individu video companies. it may have you thinking should i be creeped out or comforted? this hour we will try to sort some of it out for you. we begin with a visit to my home in atlanta. >> nice to meet you.
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>> nice to meet you, too. >> go on in. in a prior life frank ahern in new york city made a living as a private investigator who don't want to be found. he used the proverbial paper trail which back in the day was literally made of paper, phone bills, credit cards, receipts and so son. he agreed to come to my home to follow me around to see how today's paperless paper trail makes it almost impossible to hide. >> just woke up, had a cup of coffee, pulled out the last data gathering. you are letting your ip company know that you are there and you are ready to rock. >> the ip knows about us, google knows about us, yahoo knows about us. the e-mail company knows about us. >> i am going to send an e-mail to the lawn service company. >> ahern says he never had this kind of detailed information
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back in his skip tracing days. >> they would say frank qualitiy -- called ted at whatever hour. frank e-mailed ted this is what he wrote. >> let's pause here. ahern's words of caution hit close to home at fox news. we recently learned the government collected e-mails from the g mail account from chief washington correspondent james rose enin connection with the vehicles investigati-- leak investigation. each e-mail generates a lot of raw information about ourselves. according to intel we stand more than 204 million per minute. river ry one ahern says indelible. >> if we delete things from our account. >> actually delete it. >> the only delete button you have is on the lap top no delete button on the internet. >> they are forever.
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>> not just e-mails that can last forever. every minute 6 million facebook fac pages and 1 million youtube videos are viewed chld>> i just turned on my television. what sri done by doing that? >> let the cable tv company know one you are home two you are changing the channel plus they know what you are watching. hit that pause button again you probably knew the cable company knew that. later on we will tell you how data mining experts working for president obama's campaign drilled into that information as part of an unprecedented get out the vote effort in 2012. did your tv remote help reelect the president? stay tuned. net blix analyzes when you wpaue rewind or are done with the show early. netflix used the data to help develop the original hit series "house of cards." something similar is happening with my kindle.
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i do more and more of my reading on it books and the daily papers, too. >> some of these key readers report back how quickly i am reading words i am highlighting the sentences and paragraphs i am under lining. this is a prime example of going on-line and finding out wow they have been tracking me. >> so i have already left a fairly substantial dill tal trail barely even left the house. going to run errands see what other bread crumbs i can drop. >> i am going to punch in my number. >> you know what they do with that information? >> i don't. >> let's pause here again. turns out many of the terms of service agreement are a way to learn more about you as a consumer. >> these are often relationships where you are saying this is my
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identity here is my name, here is my address. >> brian kennedy is the ceo of ep sesilo epsilon. he wrote profiles on consumers to help them market them more directly. >> you had information on 250 million people by telephone, bank cards, bank issue dates, education level, income, childs date of birth, dwelling type. would you be comfortable giving up as much information about yourself as you have about a lot of people out there? >> yes, absolutely. no qualms. >> no qualms because kennedy says that peek into your private world will make your life more satisfying. which brings me to my next stop.
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it is pretty innocuous. what piece of information is going to add you to profiling? >> your credit card knows you have a child and the pharmacy as well has a record of you having a child. >> if you go to a pharmacy and pick something up what can you learn? >> you can learn a lot. you can trace and track all alon along. you can consolidate. >> a quick stop by the atm my bank records the transaction. as i take off down the road. >> cameras number one and taking pick yours of your license plate. if you have the path they have a record of where you are going and where you came from. >> i finally arrive at the
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office. inside i can hardly make a move that isn't recorded in some form. like most big companies fox news uses security cameras and warns us our on-line activity may be monitored. it is a personal device my smart phone that concerns ahern the most. >> that is a cold mine your phone calls, texts, physical location, the apps you use, the e-mails. >> by now you are surely thinking all of that digital information has made the job of tracking and finding people who would rather be lost a lot easier. and you are right. as we said in the beginning back in new york city ahern is no longer in that line of business. big data opened up a more profitable line of work. he is helping people dil disappearment>> people w
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disappearment>>. >> they make sure their homes cont be located and personal things about them family wise. >> he gives the clients the same warning he gives to me. >> is it possible to erase your digital footprint? absolutely not. >> coming up data mining for political goal. president obama won a second term, is that how. [ male announcer ] moving object detection. ♪ blind spot warning. ♪ lane departure warning. safety, down to an art. the nissan altima with safety shield technologies. nissan. innovation that excites. ♪
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>> there's a line often attributed to thomas jefferson. an informed citizen ry is the bull work of democracy. what happens when politicians know so much more about us than we know about them? my colleague peter voyeur joins me from new york. >> thanks john. we have been hearing for weeks
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about how this government has been sweeping up information about american citizens. the reasons given security, efficiency and some suggest political gain. one thing we know from last fall's election this president and his team understands the political power of big data. >> thank you, america. >> i so wish i would have been able to fulfill your hopes to lead the country in a different direction. >> nearly half of america mitt romney's half election night 2012 came as a shock with a terrible rae con me at home and new dangers abroad president obama seemed so beatable. romney didn't know what obama did. >> obama's team time and money
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something new with politics. >> he literally wrote the book on the new signs of political campaigning that obama mastered. >> make sure the people know how to vote. >> by furnish nashing data. the obama campaign made a virtual profile of every single persuadeable voter in the country. then with experiments in behavioral psychology they targeted people with personalized messages and coaxed them to the polls. >> these are pharmaceutical trials. >> the home of the labor hood giant afl cio. inside is the analyst institute. >> what is this? >> a consortium of liberal groups parties campaigns and
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consultants designed to do science and help democrats win elections. >> he like ens the enter prides to the manhattan project with the goal of developing political super weapons. it was first seen in a michigan governor's race 6 years ago. they were testing a concept called identity sail yen. >> they had voters to get one of preelection get out the vote reminders. one of them said something like here peter here is your history as a voter then there was a threat. >> they threatened to tell your neighbors you didn't vote. >> behavioral psychology could help them shape what voters thought and influence how they behaved a consortium of psychologists helped define romney. the campaign invent the several people from the analyst
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institute into the reelection headquarters in chicago. >> carol davidson was director of immigration and media targeting for the obama campaign. >> they were there for multiple region sews it was more pop secret work. you don't want the press coming by to see what was on the screens. you don't want the people to know it even existed. >> they worked in algorithms to determine who the voters where in the battle ground states. they figured out how to get the message to their voters. she developed the optimizers to tell them what television shows they were watching and when. this information was sold by some of your table companies. >> we were able to get it into the system and to the voter file
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data. >> there is something about it being out there and being used in the political campaign. >> you get e-mails sent to you all of the time you know the person that sent them to you. you can say hi peter this is barack obama, that may be jarring. it may freak you out. is it just different or is it a concern about i think vaiding your life. >> at one point during the campaign they were running it on 15 different cable stations. >> he is a republican consultant who has been preaching to his party for years about the political party of data. >> is one sides doing better than the other? >> that is an extreme view but he is right. >> karl rove is a fox news contributor and former deputy
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white house chief of staff and close to the romney campaign. democrats took it to the next level. he says they can compete and will win this political arms way. >> will they give us better manipulators better than leaders. >> you are trying to convince people this idea is eedz zee to vote for. >> if you allow on the data you make no room for leadership. it is not to follow but to mold public opinion in the right direction. >> as we have just seen data it power. how would you feel about a new government data center big enough to collect or store phone
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and make your business dream a reality. at legalzoom.com we put the law on your side. >> before the business of the constitution drafted in 1789 declared among other things that a person's paper would not be given to unreasonable searchs. we should be able to keep our mail and diaries private. secretary of state henry l. simpson echoed the sentiment when he shut down the agency that de coded foreign communications. simpson declared, gentlemen don't read each other's mail. much has changed. a new electronic age of e-mails tweeteds and blopgs and a new political layer posing threats we can't ignore.
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>> pearl harbor hit america when it could hurt it very much. there was a need to be up on enemy intelligence. >> this former trecher ry shall never again end dangerous. >> after world war ii came the cold war and the threat of global communism. it sparked a fierce debate at the heist levels regarding citizen's rights verses national security and out of that debate ultimately came the national security agency for nsa. in the 1950s the spy center was so secret the joke was the initials stood for no such agency. >> what did the president know and when did he know it. >> after watergate, however, people wanted to know what the spy agencies were really up to. in 1975 general lewallen dwam the first director of the nsa to testify publically before congress. the agency once so secretive was
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exposed. the public learned the nsa headquartered in fort mede, maryland was eavesdropping on messages sent into and out of the country. in response in 1978 the federal government passed phisa foreign intelligence surveillance act which required the nsa to get warrants from special fisa corpse. the nsa adopted and moved on. >> with the fall of the soviet union the mission teams were urgent to many. the nsa lagged behind in the latest technology. as general michael hayden the nsa director who took charge in 99 put it in an age of telecommunications breakthroughs the nsa was becoming deaf. but 69-11 dee lived -- delivere a shock that was loud enough for everyone to hear. the nsa got a bigger budget and a new anythings, stop next
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atta -- the new mission, stop the next attack. it leads us to things like a massive data collections center being built in the utah desert. >> it is really a turnkey situation where it could turn quickly and become a totalitarian state pretty quickly. >> how flexible are you with the government being able to know so much. that's next. [ larry ] younow throughout history, folks have suffered from frequent heartburn
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even elec >> even electrons take up space. i bought this memory carted 59 bucks, 64 giga bites. this can hold almost 30,000 copies of this book war and peace. staggering. what's even more staggering is an nsa data center five times the size of the capital behind me. filled with memory cards and computer chips. you may not know about it but it may soon know about you. >> 25 miles due south of salt lake city and just west of the middle of nowhere a massive construction project is clearing completion. >> they call us the spy center.
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>> the spy center that's what mad mean witmer and aid de who work at the local sandwich shop told me last summer. >> as good a guess as many the utah data center. >> it is monitoring or no one knows. >> we were told a couple years ago about possibly bringing water. >> wie build a large pump statin and a 3 million gallon water thank some estimate it will be capable of storing 5 data bite
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the of data. one iphone 5 has 16 giga bites of storage. one would be 54 iphones stacked that would be 19 inches high. one at that tipattah bite would iphones which would reach higher than the empire state building. an exibyte would reach higher than the space station. it would reach pasts moon. if it has 5 data bites they could store every e-mail cell phone call google search and surveillance camera video in america for a very long time. >> what are they going to do with the cdata? >> i don't know. it's classified. >> he is the republican governor. you have seen the reports e-mails phone records banking records all of that. >> biff been on the tour they
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give me a general over view of what they are going to be doing. >> the details you have to get for them. >> it is a facility for the intelligence community that would have a major focus on cyber community. >> which weren't given access toe we took to the sky. >> i like to look real close because right now we are 500 feet over the ue saw taat that time data center. this is as close as we are going to get. >> from the side its it is gigantic. >> they went over the government site a facility that has an increasing number of critics. >> raises the most questions about the vast data that could be held in one place.
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>> before he resigned for reasons we will tell you about in a second. >> where is this coming from are we talking about e-mail traffic or phone calls? >> it would be just about any of that and maybe more. >> they should be concerned about letting the government go too far in the name of security. >> that is george other win that is 1984 that is what that would look like. >> he is not alone in feeling that way. >> he worked at the nsa for nearly four decades. >> after 9-11 it became a warrantless program approved president bush. >> it started with the billing
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data, records of people in the united states calling people in the united states. i asked if they were collecting in the word of 3 billion a day. >> 3 billion phone records? >> 3 billion. >> in simple terms nsa was fined on americans inside this contest. >> they went to the new york sometimes which iks posed it in 2005. in 2007 the nsa discontinued that program. the same year suspecting he was the source for the new york times lakes he raided the home. >> my son answered the door they pushed him back at gun point. i came out and said come on out. >> he denied being a leaker and waudz not charged with any crime. the fellow bywhistleblower was.
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tom drake was indicted on espionage. he pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor more of misusing a government computer. >> i would not share anything in any way, shape or form. >> it was lawful and it was appropriate. >> as director of the nsa from 99 to 2005 general michael hayden was in his boss. >> this is america. have a different view. i think it made america safe during a period of great danger. >> he says vinnie and drake were wrong uninformed when they said the program was illegal. congress in 2008 amended the foreign intelligence surveillance act legalizing much of the surveillance going on. that makes drake as worried as
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ever. people believe obama used the power more than threading the constitution george w. bush. >> i had private conversations of people who used to work in if the bush administration the answer is woe wouldn't couldn't have gotten any of the information they did. >> far less transparent than the bush administration? >> yes. >> that is why they become fierce critics of the center scheduled to be operational in the fall. saying it would have a limitless capacity to pry into america's lives. >> what could they do with this what are the controls? >> one man we hoped would answer it the national security agency general chief hal zander. when he declined requests to sit down with us for the interview we sat down with offices where alexander was speaking at a
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cyber security event. they hold the data from the american citizen. >> we don't hold data they take civil liberties and privacy as the most important thing they do in securing this nation. so when people just throw out oh they are going to have all of this stuff at the data center that's balloon knee. that's ludicrous. i am not going to come out and say here's what we are doing in utah. that would be ridiculous, too. it would give add ver terries a great advantage. >> this is about the possibility the government's stunning new capacity to collect store and analyze data would have less than noble leaders if not now than in the future. >> it is a turnkey situation and
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back totalitarian state pretty quickly. the capacity to do that is there. >> life bliberty and the pursui of happiness are there all of the time. the people we ask american people how much more do you want me to do? >> what should a government computer know and how can it know it? with the nsa we go to silicon valley for answers. a little later how many of you have an iphone or android or galaxy put up your hand. >> teaching kids how not to ruin their lives with a smart phone. {off-lineñ] ask>> ruthless
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people, risky business, the man
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who knew too much. these are videos to robert boor who once rented. when he was nominated to the he outraged people that in 1988 congress made it a crime to dispose of their records. they kndon't know what you want but what you want to know next. >> claudia reports. >> after the boston marathon bombings where three were killed and many injured. turns out russian authorities
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warned them about tamerlan's links to russian radicals. they looked into his travel internet use and personal association. they didn't find him to be a terrorist threat. when he went to russia to meet with under ground groups the fbi missed that. the reason his name was misspelled. the point is it is one thing to have the data, it is another to understand it's significance. >> we are teaching the computer how to go through large amounts of data. it was recently acquired ernst & you young. >> it collects things from the
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government. this through the noise of all of the world's electronics communications isolate the fragments and connect the dots before the threat materializes. they are pushing to expand the capacity to do it. >> what do you think would surprise people the most about data mining. >> computers can do far more than they can. >> the biggest challenge isn't collecting the information it is making sense of it all. >> it is terms they may be interested in. they are nuclear powered or bridges or stations or airport. here is the tricky part if we miss stuff we don't realize. you have lots and lots of things
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people are confident in the data. the old cry wolf situation, right? >> even big brother changes information. it will allow them to do it. >> people should be realize tick. there is no human reader going through looking at your e-mail ch it is impossible. >> it is the interaction between cold data and live humans where the sinner gee takes place. it was a different story when they went through hours of footage. bombers but
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to avoid false leads that can waste valuable time and the turning point came when they released the information on april 18 asking the public to help identify the is discuss spents. the suspects were captured by the next day. they were allegedly planning to go to new york and set off more ex-plowive j., who knows how many more might have died if not tore what could be seen as an ultimately successful data mining operation. >> when we return. growing up in an age where all of the stupid things you do can live forever o
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in the late 1800s, future >> in the late 1800's lewey
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brenda is worried about a new phenomenon, snapshot photography. if newspapers can snap and print any one's pictures what would happen to our privacy? years later on the bench he wrote the right free people value most is the right to be left alone. if that is still true, why are so many people putting so much out there on-line? >> what do you think some of the things you need to think about before you put them on-line? >> welcome to elementary school in southampton massachusetts. >> you can't be inappropriate. you will get a reputation for that. >> how to not rue entheir lives with iphones. >> i was noticing my students talking about their lives on facebook and it was clear that they weren't quite sure how to
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navigate through that. >> you should ask yourself what you need to put out there. >> you really need to put this up there? one of the things i know my 11-year-old they are fearless with technology they will dive in and figure out ramifications later. >> what can the harmful effects of posting something inappropriate be? oo talking about the personality now. >> i tell my kids you can't do things and say things a certain way because it's going to follow you. >> stacy's son anthony is in kevin's class. she has a 10th grade daughter francesca both have laptops and i pads. >> what are your concerns about that? >> i want them to go to college some day and not have the admissions office come and say, well this is what's happening when you are in high school or 7th grade or things like that. >> or things like this. >> after april's boston marathon bombing teenaged girls defended
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suspect on facebook and twitter posting among other things free jaw har or too pretty to be arrested. -- pretty to be guilty. >> kim kardashian's sex tape was up loaded on the internet. soon she was a reality show star and the center of a multi million dollar airport.>> paris hilton's sex tape on the internet helped make it happen. >> charlie sheen's career was teetering on the brink. he began tweeting out all sorts of embarrassing messages and posting videos in an earlier day would have fung nished him. >> they would rather have the
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fame and celebrity rather than the certains of self-respect. >> the wall street journal editorial page calls it the age of i sandiscretion. >> do you keep that in the back of your mind where your son or daughter may do something outrageous. >> i never thought about it until you said that. it is scary for me to think that way. >> he captures one of the great paradoxes of the digital age. half a century ago george other well imaged a society in which our every movement is monitored by big brother. today it has far more ability than other well imaged to see record analyze everything we do. they even know much of what they think. one thing would surprise them. instead of citizens demanding
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their privacy they can't wait to give it away. >> if the group n is behaving like a moron a lot of people are willing to give up their privacy and sense of shame and embarrassment. >> the problem is there's just not enough fame or fortune for everyone with a digital tamara and broad panned connection. but the capacity to screw up your life does seem limitless. dominos pizza employee criminally charged after posting videos of themselves doing gross things to food they were preparing. >> a lesson lost on this taco bell employee. he was recently fired after this photo was posted on facebook. >> it is not just kids. >> i am announcing my nomination to congress. >> who can forget anthony weiner
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forced to resign ain disgrace after his pictures went viral. >> there would be a little voice in the back of your head saying, i don't think you should do this. how many of you have an iphone or an troyed or galaxy put up your hand. wow. >> which things us back to the massachusetts classroom. >> engaging your kids into what you are doing. >> they are focusing on three big things they can do themselves. they can link you in. no exception. master and use the privacy settings that every site your kids are on. third you must keep up with the newest social sites and apps make sure you are not focusing on facebook when your kid has moved on to instraw gram or snap chat. >> think of a year ago. i don't think i have heard of
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insta gram. the hardest part is keeping up with the changes in digital media. >> do you trust with mind faith. try to keep the conversation open. >> two generations ago jordan moore predicted computers would double in capacity every two years. it is so accurate is called mooer's law. the question is whether there are social political and legal institutions can keep up to ensure big data doesn't turn into big brother. it is ultimately aware of born citizens anothered by carefully watching for ourselves what's going on around us we will get and keep the country we want. one that is efficient one that
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is safe, but also one that doesn't always have us looking over our shoulders. that is our show. thanks for watching. make a wish! i wish we could lie here forever. i wish this test drive was over, so we could head back to the dealership. [ male announcer ] it's practically yours. test drive! [ male announcer ] but we still need your signature. volkswagen sign then dre is back. and it's never been easier to get a jetta. that's the power of german engineering. get $0 down, $0 due at signing, $0 deposit, and $0 first month's payment on any new volkswagen. visit vwdealer.com today. but, dad, you've got... [ voice of dennis ] allstate.
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