Amygdala: Blue in the Face
This is mostly a placeholder in case I come back to this later, but this blogger suggests that the reason why Bush & co. didn't get the warrants was that they were doing large-scale pattern analysis on the communications of tens of thousands of people (or more) . . . thus making acquiring warrants impractical at best.
This kind of analysis is precisely what I do in my research. I have no doubt whatsoever that I could get a job with the CIA or NSA to simply continue doing what I've been doing. Let me be clear: I don't think that there's anything ethically wrong with the research qua research; the evil, if any, is in how it is used.
But it still itches me.
This is mostly a placeholder in case I come back to this later, but this blogger suggests that the reason why Bush & co. didn't get the warrants was that they were doing large-scale pattern analysis on the communications of tens of thousands of people (or more) . . . thus making acquiring warrants impractical at best.
This kind of analysis is precisely what I do in my research. I have no doubt whatsoever that I could get a job with the CIA or NSA to simply continue doing what I've been doing. Let me be clear: I don't think that there's anything ethically wrong with the research qua research; the evil, if any, is in how it is used.
But it still itches me.
Right. Evil, that is.
Date: 4 January 2006 19:43 (UTC)To this I would add: The evil is in the trampling of civil liberties required to perform the monitoring, and the brazen audacity of gathering the data in the first place. Once the data is gathered, certainly, there's no additional evil incurred by the poor math geek who finds some eigenvectors in it (or whatever the cool kids do with data these days).
Reminds me of the conundrum of researchers who could do really good stuff with the primary data gathered from the human experimentation of the Nazis in ...
Crap. Godwin. I lose.
Re: Right. Evil, that is.
Date: 4 January 2006 20:23 (UTC)In some ways I feel as though what I ought to be doing, research wise, is explore methods of social network analysis that require as little data as possible, so as to not be encouraging large-scale data collection of this sort. (My research has been--and, I hope, will continue to be--public, so I can't prevent various three-letter agencies from being ordered to misuse it.) But certain very useful metrics that I use in my models--some of them indeed related to eigenvectors--would probably be really skewed by, say, 99% missing data (and that's still surveilling 1%!).