Monday, March 28, 2016

Why Spy

                                                         

Sometimes i stop and think why is the government is spying on there own people, Aren´t they suppose to help us with our need. Instead they go behind our back and spy on us and take all of our information and share it to the internet, they use GPS on the cars to find out our were about.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/12/08/cellphone-data-spying-nsa-police/3902809/

https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=images&cd=&ved=0ahUKEwiQmpncrtfLAhWTth4KHfKnDnEQjRwIBw&url=http%3A%2F%2F395cjs.blogspot.com%2F2012%2F04%2Fcellphones-new-warrantless-search.html&psig=AFQjCNGFop5ewRLlH5dIobEDWla5n6nPEA&ust=1458841621890532

From the minutes you pick your phone up to the time you put it down the police knows everything you have done. the time you full your car with gas and everywhere you go the police knows. in ass you can see in this cartoon it is like there is a camera with everything you do.

Some of my experience of the cell phone tracking and GPS tracking. when i go shopping online and i went on a website it shows me cheaper price on the something i buy. Every time i am driving and at a fast speed i always see a police car after a while.








Tuesday, March 22, 2016

¨Drones¨ Whats the real danger?



Ever since drones have come out they have been viewed as dangerous flying torture machines, but is that the case? The way I see it, Drones can be both dangerous and helpful. They can be dangerous because one doesn't know what dangerous things they could be carrying such as weapons ,gas´s etc. They can also be used for good things such as ¨transportation of blood ¨ state scientists. Recreational Drone flying has been restricted due to many drone mishaps. People Such as ¨Casey Neistat" a famous Youtuber has had great success with these drones and it has made getting shots that you cant get with a traditional camera possible
Adhttp://www.canyon-news.com/drone-store-burglarized-second-time/38296d caption

While I do believe that the government should take the proper precautions to keep us safe I also believe that they shouldn't restrict us to the point where it hinders us from using them for a good purpose.I can personally say that drones can have a huge impact on how we live out lives. Such as delivering us things in a matter of minutes it will increase productivity and boost the economy if people are more motivated to buy things without leaving their houses and it takes the same amount of time to get there as if they went to the store

In conclusion i believe that we should all get a chance to fly a drone and not be restricted and judged such as ¨The Crucible ¨ in the play there are many people that frown upon people that dont fit in. This is the reason we changed our prospective on things and ,if we restrict drones we would be taking a huge step backwards.









When too mutch has become too mutch

Close your eyes and imagine a world where you are free. Free to go anywhere you want , do what you want and be where you want without worrying or thinking "Am I being watched or am I being recorder". Well my fellow american's you must keep on dreaming. 


http://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/25516/public-surveillance

This image right now goes with what i'm trying to express because it symbolizes a normal women and her daughter being spied on and privacy being disrupted. Right now as you are reading this blog you are probably being watched by a couple guys in a room just kidding didn't mean to scare you like that. Seriously cameras in public spaces have become a huge problem in America. I know I can speak for my fellow American's that we enjoy having our privacy and not being watched by some weirdo on a screen 24/7 . Many European countries have been doing this and that's great for them but were America and in America we have the right to privacy as so is stated in the 4th amendment.  I hope the government is watching this because they need to know that people have rights and should be respected and messed around with. As a young boy I would always wonder and be terrified on the thought that somebody is watching us but to find out several years later that its true makes me look at my way of life in a different a perspective and i know i'm able to speak for other people that what the government is doing is wrong. We the people understand its to protect us but there are lines and limits and rights that have been crossed and disrupted for the overuse of cameras in public spaces. 

Is Your Car Spying On YOU??????

The ¨black box¨ in your car could be spying on you. You´re probably asking yourself what is a black box? It is a hidden device inside a vehicle that records audio info and info from the vehicle in case of a crash or something of that nature, but it could be used to spy on you...Most of all planes have one and since 2014 it was required that all cars sold by a dealership to have one installed. This is a very easy way for the government to spy on our everyday life while we´re on our way to work or to our friends house..in a article I read online it states that right now only 20 seconds of info could be recorded during the event of a crash but is this really true? Could the government secretly be recording our everyday lives?? To me this is very possible. If black boxes can record info and statistics how much longer till they start gaining info on our lives OUTSIDE of our vehicle? What if they´re already recording us? We would n´t know until someone exposes the truth. 

 http://11796-presscdn-0-10.pagely.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/blackbox.jpg
A while back Microsoft surprised the world with their new kinect system that had a ¨always on¨ feature. This was scary for a lot of people, including me because i myself have a xbox with a kinect system. The government could be watching my living room as i speak right now and i would never know and that is what is scary about it. How much longer till the government starts watching our every move? How much longer till the government tries to control our religions and beliefs just like ¨The Crucible¨? I don´t know how much longer till any of this happens but it damn well is scary to think about, especially for our kids that will have to grow up in this messed up generation. 

Why are we being watch?

     Google recently had a complaint filed against them because they are collecting and data mining school students personal information. It was also reported that the Chromebooks sold to schools are being tracked, storing data, saving passwords,etc. This is a violation of our privacy. Why are we constantly being watched by the government? Is privacy not a right? What cruel, shameful act have we done to be watched and monitored like a nuclear machine? Our rights for privacy are being destroyed.

   Google, Inc is a worldwide company and a basic foundation of social media. Google has access to our personal information, not just students but anyone who owns an electronic device that has signed in with a google account, which is a requirement to even use their email and storage services. Why is it that the people in power overuse that power? It seems like even when we're alone we're not alone.  One time I was using the house phone talking to my boyfriend about the movies. Now I don't care that my mother was listening in, but her feeling the need that she has to listen in. Where does our moral ground lie? Referring back to Google, why do they feel the need to watch us? For entertainment?
https://www.eff.org/press/releases/google-deceptively-tracks-students-internet-browsing-eff-says-complaint-federal-trade


 
https://eportfolio.pace.edu/view/view.php?id=135636


This intrusion by Google is very similar to "The Crucible" because someone with higher power has taken advantage of their human rights, in this case, death was involved. In the crucible people were constantly being watched because of something that was prohibited. Which makes me question what are we doing that is prohibited?

Government spies to webcam

Oliver Seh

     As we wake up every day we see tend to see the beauty of life is in every precious moment!! Stop and smell the rose. Everyday is not good,but there is something good in everyday. We as an Nation need to thank the government each day for all they are doing to protect us. Citizen privacy are limited that's not good because in the 5th amendment protect citizen privacy of personal information. The good thing behinds this that we are still alive
     The main purpose they do this is to protect us so we can lived to see another day. There are a lot of bad peoples in this world criminals and also terrorist. The government spies on their citizen to capture criminal or terrorist. They can do this by using their special internet trackers called GCHQ and RATS. GCHQ stands for government communication headquarters, GCHQ stores millions of images gleaned from webcam. They are receive by the advance recognition system so the government can tell who doing what. This may sound creepy but they don't even have to trigger lights to see you. Do you think that's insane? RATS are remote access Trojan the government uses RATS as remote administration tools to spy on citizens. Apple INC, Facebook, Google discussed this issue to the government because they thought it was wrong for them to spy on citizen. They questioned the government authority to its people arguing that  the government broke the right of privacy. Its not harming anyone the government isn't gossiping that you are cooking. The only people that worry about the government taking spying are the ones trying to terrorize us as citizen. If we follow all the laws there is no reason for the government to abuse us otherwise.
     In Pennsylvanian parents sued an principal at Lower Merion School District because the principal caught the doing engaging an inappropriate behavior. Even though it was illegal for the principal to do that he did not gossip he went and ask the boy why he was doing an inappropriate. An principal suppose to be an leader of the school you need to find out if your followers are doing what is right. The student was caught engaging an bad behavior.There is no reason to take a school laptop home and not do nothing. You either need to do your work or do whatever instead of doing inappropriate behavior. Conclusion was that principal was sent to jail for spying on an student. Even in the Crucible people were getting convicted or accused of being witches. In the book when Hale question John Proctor and Elizabeth Proctor about the trial he then began to see a voodoo doll laying on their couch. He asked them about it and they claimed Mary Warren brought it but they didn't have clear evidence so they was now accuse of witchcraft and went to the court. This is like the government spying on webcam Mr Hale investigated them and found an magical doll so they accused of witchcraft. Since the trial was still going on many people spied on others trying to get the real criminals. Later on in the book John Proctor was the criminal he was convicted. As you can see stop questioning the government authority on privacy thank them for capturing the bad people who knows what will happen if they was not guilty.
Add captionhttp://www.infowars.com/illegal-nsa-surveillance-of-americans-secret-authorizations-granted-by-bush-and-obama/


Monday, March 21, 2016

Prosecuting Whistle-blower

The U.S government has pasted a law saying that they can spy on every one and they can invade your privacy. This law is called the espionage act which is used to by Obama's administration to spy on other and this act has been used countless times. The real question is why are we being watched for?
The government tells us that they are protecting us from terrorists by collecting data on us. According to Edward Snowden that is not the case. In 2013 Snowden uncovered some highly classified documents about the united states government and how they were collecting data on their own people and invading their privacy.


http://nataliep49.com/uncategorized/invading-your-privacy-simply-a-matter-of-ethics/

As you can see the image above shows a man listening to two people's conversation and on the side of the phone you can the american flag. This image is showing a presentation of how the government listens to our conversation as we speak.

Image result for government invades our privacy
https://drakalogia.wikispaces.com/PERIOD+1+INVASION+OF+PRIVACY

The government also watch things like google to keep track of what we are doing and what we watch this is also ways for them to collect data on us. As you know google is well known internet space and since it is mainly used for everything the government saw that it would be a great idea to take over google and collect and access people's privacy.

In my opinion I think it wrong and awfully invasive that the government would collect every information on their own people even when they have no criminal record or any possibility of being a threat to the government.

This is extremely obscured and the government should not be this invasive unless the person has a criminal record that shows that they are a threat to the government. I also think that if they are to check our privacy they should be limited to certain extent that would not have people trying to hide what they are doing. 

From my experience every time i'm on amazon looking up something maybe like a shirt or shoe then after I exit the app or the website I would start getting ads about what I looked up. This shows that the government is monitoring our phones and our computer it also shows the violation of our privacy.

I cannot quite relate to the crucible but I can say that their government was unfairly calling their own people witches which shoes that they didn't trust their own people kind of how our government is invading our privacy by not trusting their own people. 

Student privacy at Risk

It wasn't until my sophomore year of high school that I was introduced to Google's newest school improvement. This brand new piece of equipment was referred to as Chrome books. To me, it was an ordinary laptop. To the school, it was an easier access to online school work. To the government, Chrome books were a way to spy on students to ensure they're viewing appropriate school related items. Article

As student, having a large company such as Google constantly watching me as I log onto their browser is a humongous put off. Now I understand due to tragic incidents, such as September 11, 2001, that the government has put it upon themselves to spy on citizens. However I do not appreciate being watched. Recently, in one of my classes we learned that students' rights have been limited in order to ensure we are appropriately learning at our schools.

According to several articles, Google doesn't release any of our private data to the public. But that doesn't make it okay for the company or the government to interfere like that. What ever happened to the literal definition of the word "privacy?" Imagine your child playing innocently on your Android. We're all aware that Android and Google are two successful companies that cooperate with one another. So just picture your child in the arms of a total stranger working for the government. A little unsettling right?

In the story, The Crucible, the townspeople are often suspicious of one another. No one trusts anyone. Let's say the government's lack of justice represents Abigail Williams. Once you've done one bad thing, you've automatically have been charged as guilty. Despite being totally innocent the government will suspect one of being guilty. Regardless of being young, a female, a male, or anything you're always guilty until proven innocent to society.

Protecting us from the tainted reality is inevitable. Google cannot continue censoring us, because we're younger from the horrors of society. Sooner or later we need to understand that life and human kind is a dirty and unhappy place. Schools and the government can't hide that away from us. Distractions? Inappropriate banter? In some cases, those things are true. But privacy should be respected regardless of the threatening distractions to our education.  

Who is Watching You ?

Who Is Watching You?

                Don't you ever wonder who is watching you? Or if anyone is watching what you're doing on YOUR computer or your phone? Well if you didn't already know yes you are being watched. The government is watching all the searches you make and what you watch also along with the texts messages you send , phone calls. 

spying              Google chrome has the access of that, where they listen to our conversations and seeing what we are doing on the computer without our consent. This website tells us "It seems as google's software, with the ability to everything being said in a room was being installed on computers without the owners' consent , and everyone's freaking out about it." 

              My opinion about all this government spying on us I think is bad. Its invading our personal space and personal time. This should be stopped immediately because without the person knowing we are watched they should notify if they need something from us and with the warrant. 

       This connects to the crucible because the witches spied on each other and if one missed church you would automatically be a witch. So they will always be watched and followed. The witches would always know what someone was doing just like google chrome they would always know and keep what you searched up or looked at. Even if you think you deleted it the government would always have it in stock. 


         



The Great Guantanamo Debate


                                                                                                                                   


The world changed after 9/11, the safe-haven that was known as the U.S. didn't seem so safe anymore to its residents and the politicians in power had to make quick and urgent actions to keep faith going in the public. In 2001 U.S. citizens were asked an important question, "give up your privacy for maximum security or keep your privacy but take your chances of safety out in public. We all know how this story ends as the government now listens in on our phone calls, text messages, email exc. while most people have gotten used to this there are still a lot of people out their who still protest against this. but other than just simple wire tapping the government has also gotten a lot more serious on their methods of interrogation. Enter Guantanamo bay
   
The super jail in all its glory 

For those who don't know what Guantanamo bay is, it is a super military prison found on the outskirts of Guantanamo's naval base. (think Arkham asylum form batman) ever since its reveal to the american public the super jail has been under a lot of pressure from the public and media as rumors of harsh and cruel interrogation methods such as water boarding were being used on prisoners. when asked why such harsh methods were being used it was revealed that the suspected criminals being held there were people involved in terrorist attacks and espionage. they said that to prevent the loss of human lives that methods like this needed to be used to get the information they needed as soon as possible. but this begs the question, how do we know when our interrogation isn't ethical anymore? In an article published by The Register Guard article writer Jhona Sherman says that Guantanamo bay should stay open as she believes "The United States needs to put a plan in place that allows our federal government and military alone to determine the fate of the detainees. Putting such a big decision in the hands of another country would undermine and contradict our leadership in the fight against terrorism." which is a valid point but in my opinion I still do not believe this is a valid enough reason to keep the prison open. some of the people who are held in the prison are simply people who have been kept their based on suspicion alone and to incriminate someone and put them through rigorous interrogation is wrong, doubly so if they are actually innocent. and what if they were innocent? no matter how much compensation that person could receive it wouldn't be enough to erase memories and heal scars. 
                                                           
This actually reminds me of a book that I recently read called the crucible. the crucible takes place around the late 1800's  and in a secluded little village. the people who inhabit the town are all religious people or so they are supposed to be. But when rumors of witch craft start surrounding a group of girls the townsfolk start pressuring the girls and one they all start turning on each other. one of them in particular is Tituba the slave girl who is accused of witchcraft and beaten until she admits that she was doing witch craft when she had no involvement in it whatsoever. 
the brings me back to the Guantanamo torture interrogations. The people who could be held captive in the prison or any concentration camp could be innocent but because of the extremes their prosecutors put them through they might just give up and admit to a crime they didn't do. 
So the question is torture a moral option to be used in times of crisis?" that is up to you.   

    











































Thursday, March 10, 2016

When is Enough, Enough?

Shortly after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on America, the United States Congress enacted legislative measures to ensure the safety of American citizens, and protect the country from another terrorist attack. Law enforcement agencies throughout the country were given broad powers and flexibility to put in place initiatives to ensure national security. Do these laws and law enforcement measures go too far? There are some among us who think so.

Edward Snowden, the NSA whistleblower who leaked classified NSA documents about NSA spying on American citizens, has said that the U.S. government is building “an architecture of oppression,” where rights of American citizens are being slowly taken away. Counter-terrorism expert, Brian Jenkins suggests that America has put in place the foundation for a very oppressive state that could very “easily undermine basic democratic freedoms we enjoy in this country.” Tom Hintze, a freelance writer, believes that the Patriot Act, passed just nine days after the 9/11 attacks, is one of the ways that the “architecture of oppression” is being implemented in the U.S

The Patriot Act,  intended to help government agencies detect and prevent possible acts of terrorism, has been used by the government and law enforcement entities to collect and store our personal data, collect cell phone records, regulate our personal financial transactions, criminalize political dissent, and give broad powers of surveillance of Americans to the NSA.  In 2013, the Patriot Act was used in 1,618 drug cases, and only 15 terrorism cases.  This level of scrutiny by the government and law enforcement entities beg the question of when is enough, enough. The image below, which we looked at in class, suggests that our government is spying on us under the guise of national security. Is national security more important than individual rights? 

http://www.corbisimages.com/stock-photo/rights-managed/42-16309641/usa-american-flag-man-peering

In The Crucible we see many instances where individual rights were in conflict with the hunt for witches and the safety of the Salem community; as perceived by those in power. Despite instances of cruel and/or unaccepted treatment towards the accused victims, Parris says that “All innocent and Christian people are happy for the courts in Salem,” and Danforth adds that “either a person is with this court or he must be counted against it.” Like Parris and Danforth in The Crucible, it appears that the U.S. Government is saying either you are with us, or you are not. And, if you are with us, then you should be willing to give up some of your rights and freedoms.

Our right to privacy, as provided for in the Bill of Rights, is a human right that protects us from unnecessary government intrusion in our lives. Laws like the Patriot Act threaten this right, and should give us reason to pause and ask questions. Is the Patriot Act a precursor to an oppressive state? Under what conditions or circumstances is it acceptable to use these measures? What limits should be placed on how measures authorized by these laws are used?  Each of us will probably respond to these questions, and the issue of individual rights versus national security differently; however, the important thing is that we respond. We must make our wishes known.

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Have Public Schools Signed a Deal with the Devil?

This past September, my second grader came home from school very excited. "Mommy!' he joyfully yelled at me, before he'd even taken off his backpack, "can I sign into the Chrome Book and show Cooper a video I saw at school today?"

I was a little taken aback, and I chuckled at his lack of knowledge about the correct terminology.  I did, however know what he meant - he wanted to log into his MCPS Google account so he could get into his teacher's Google Classroom - and I was aware the Chrome books were coming to his school; in fact, at Back to School Night, his principal proudly discussed what their plans were for the old, outdated computer lab. Now that each classroom had access to a cart of Chrome Books, the lab could be re-purposed.

But what made me nervous, as I helped him get logged into to his account through Google Chrome on our home computer, was how quickly and easily he could log in and access the inter-webs.  At the tender age of 7, he was already a full-fledged Google customer.

In my second full-time job as a high school teacher, we are currently reading The Crucible and our unit themes are power, oppression, and control. I've taken the opportunity to discuss what Edward Snowden calls the "architecture of oppression" with my students- truly Orwellian ways in which the federal government has slowly started to build a police state where all of our moves are tracked.  In class, we took a look at this image:

http://flickrhivemind.net/blackmagic.cgi?id=2310693918&url=http%3A%2F%2Fflickrhivemind.net%2FUser%2Fddonar%2FInteresting%3Fsearch_type%3DUser%3Btextinput%3Dddonar%3Bphoto_type%3D250%3Bmethod%3DGET%3Bnoform%3Dt%3Bsort%3DInterestingness%23pic2310693918&user=&flickrurl=http://www.flickr.com/photos/24311072@N03/2310693918

and asked some tough questions about how far was too far and what liberties we were willing to give up to keep ourselves safe from terrorism. And yes, the cartoon is silly, my students and I agreed - what would the NSA want with a child's secrets?

This semester, ironically, just as we were reading about the ways in which the Puritans tracked each other's movements and gathered "evidence" against the terrible John Proctor (who doesn't go to church often enough and gasp! plows on Sundays), I was given access to my own classroom set of Chrome Books because a Social Studies teacher uses my classroom. I knew about Google Classroom and have used Google Groups with my AP kids for many years, but I hadn't yet set up this whole virtual classroom world for my students. The reality is that this is where we are - we are living in a digital world, and as both a teacher and mother, I struggle with the idea that a bulk of our personal and professional lives are now lived online and it's making us all that much more vulnerable. Particularly, it is making our children, already so very vulnerable, veritable prey for large corporations, such as Google.  And worse perhaps?

In fact, Google is now practically ubiquitous in American classrooms.  In the third quarter of 2015, more than half of all computers purchased by American school systems were Chrome Books, and practically all American school children are using Google software of some kind or another in their schools.  In MCPS, all of our students, even our tiniest babies, our kindergartners, have Google accounts, bought and paid for with your tax dollars.

And for what? Do the benefits outweigh the massive risks? Have we really thought about all of this, and what it might mean for our future? Yes. Chrome Books are cheap. They are easy to use. It's easy to post assignments. Easy for seven-year-olds to log-in to.  But with everything in life, it's never that easy.  There are drawbacks to every thing we do, pros and cons. And have we asked ourselves what those drawbacks are? Have we asked whether or not we are willing to risk our children's privacy because of ease?

One such pretty massive drawback, as depicted in that cartoon above, is that Google is tracking our kids' movements online. They insist they are not doing anything dark with this data - just looking at way to improve their software. But how do we know? Can we trust them? They seem to speak out of both sides of their mouths, and Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) alleges that only some of the software is protected under educational privacy agreements, such as Gmail and Calendar.  But if students are using, say, Google News to conduct research for a school project, because technically Google News isn't part of the educational platform, then Google can use that data to track your kids and tailor advertisements to them.

All of this is very, very scary, especially considering that thanks to outdated, 1970's era student privacy laws, schools systems don't even need to ask our permission as parents - as long as they have a contract with the company, they are legally allowed to share your child's information with the company. So the question remains - who are we trusting with our students' data? And, most importantly - can they be trusted?

In The Crucible, Parris and Danforth continue to insist that the court works if your heart in clean, and that if you have nothing to hide, you shouldn't be afraid. But is this really true? Can we really trust our elected officials, if motivated by money or other external carrots, to keep our best interest at heart?  And most importantly, to protect our children's right to privacy?  Is targeted advertising really that dangerous? Or, is it possible that this seemingly innocent data collection can easily become something worse, if it falls into the wrong hands? Or if, God forbid, our government decides that what we're doing isn't something they like?

Ultimately, as parents, it is our job to protect our own children. But it makes our jobs so much more difficult when our school systems, those other people whose job it is to protect our children, are thrusting these programs into our children's educational lives, into their tiny, trusting hands. Maybe they aren't, as they promise, doing anything nefarious with this information. But what if they are?

Can we really take that risk?

Friday, March 4, 2016

Welcome Message

Welcome to our shared blog space.  Students will create a blog post in which they make an argument related to the overarching issue of our country spying on us.  The posts will include a link to the article that the student is responding to, a cited image that supports their argument, and personal experiences, as well as an example that connects in from their reading of The Crucible.

Students will also read and respond to at least two other blog posts, making insightful, interesting comments that go beyond "I agree with you," or "I disagree with you, or "Good point."