I promise this is my last post on this as it is way off topic.

RobLupella wrote:
You forgot that this would be outsourced to the private sector so it would be done cheaply and efficiently and better than the government could do it. They would make additional revenue by selling the "marketing" data to other companies thereby lowering the cost to everyone. I still don't see a problem. We voluntarily give up our privacy in exchange for lower prices at Harry Tweeter, Lowes, Fud Kitty etc and even to Facebook, Linked In, Myspace etc. Why not give it up to stop terrorists?
I am still not sure if you are yanking my chain or not. Have you ever been involved in a government contract? I have, and I don't see it being done cheaply. I think your cost argument could work if you were to adapt an existing commercial product (which has already been developed in a free market economy so you have lower costs via competition) for government use. But a built to government spec from scratch? Expensive even if done by private industry. Anyhow, I am less concerned about the cost than I am about spending the money and it just not working.
Todd Breakey wrote:
Charlie Guthrie wrote:
The easier question to pose is how do you identify aberrant behavior? It would be pretty easy to identify the movement patterns of many "normal" people and then identify those who behaved differently. Just imagine that most folks move about driving at or near the speed limit and stay within 15 miles of home. Do you qualify as normal? No? Well then you might need a little more scrutiny.
Been to too many Democratic fund raisers? Well we Republicans may need to evaluate you a little more closely.... And it grows from there.
Charlie G
This is exactly what El Al has employeed so effectively to combat terrorism for the last 30 years or so. :shrug:
I haven't mentioned Israel's general success, but they could be considered the poster child on how to do it right. It is my understanding that they clearly have significant automated systems for profiling (which may not pass muster here in the US due to constitutional issues). But what allows their system to work is a group of highly trained individuals who interpret the data from their systems (right there at the border crossing, airports, ports, etc.) I just don't think you can scale up that concept to a national level for a country of this size. The Israelis have decided it's worth the cost (of which I am sure part of our US tax dollars pay for) and they also currently have a higher risk level than we do.
Richard
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Richard Casto
1972 Porsche 914
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http://motorsport.zyyz.comMoney can't buy happiness, but somehow it's more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than a Kia.