We See It All, Jon Fasman
We See It All, Jon Fasman
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We See It All
Liberty and Justice in an Age of Perpetual Surveillance

Author: Jon Fasman

Narrator: Jason Culp

Unabridged: 9 hr 58 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: PublicAffairs

Published: 01/26/2021


Synopsis

This investigation into the legal, political, and moral issues surrounding how the police and justice system use surveillance technology asks the question: what are citizens of a free country willing to tolerate in the name of public safety? The police now have unparalleled power at their fingertips: surveillance technology. Seamless, persistent, even permanent surveillance is available—sometimes already deployed, sometimes waiting for the right excuse. Automatic license-plate readers allow police to amass a granular record of where people go, when, and for how long. Drones give police eyes—and possibly weapons—in the skies. Facial recognition poses perhaps the most dire and lasting threat than any other technology. Algorithms purport to predict where and when crime will occur, and how big a risk a suspect has of re-offending. Tools can crack a device's encryption keys, rending all privacy protections useless.

Embedding himself with both police and community activists in locales around the country—ranging from Newark, NJ and Baltimore, MD, to Los Angeles and Oakland, CA—Jon Fasman looks at how these technologies help police do their jobs, and what their use means for our privacy rights and civil liberties. We want safe streets and fewer criminals, but we also want to protect our privacy rights and civil liberties. Fasman provides a framing for thinking through through these issues, exploring questions like: should we expect to be tracked and filmed whenever we leave our homes? Should the state have access to all of the data we generate? Should private companies? What might happen if all of these technologies are combined and put in the hands of a government with scant regard for its citizens' civil liberties?

Through on-the ground reporting and vivid story-telling, Fasman explores the moral, legal, and political questions these surveillance tools and techniques pose.
 

Reviews

Goodreads review by Heidi on October 16, 2020

I am required to immediately love books with chapter titles like "The China Problem" followed by "The Oakland Solution". Beyond that this is a good, up to date, overview of the surveillance state apparatus being built and used. Some of it's only used in Ecuador or China, The African Union or Juarez.......more

Goodreads review by Lynn on September 14, 2021

Overview on how police surveillance is destroying civil liberties.......more

Goodreads review by Patrick on July 23, 2020

I have been working on traceability systems - for food - pretty much for three decades. When disaster strikes, people get sick or even die, we try to analyze what happened. We track the purchases the person did, what they ate and where it came from. Traceability systems save lives. Current technology......more

Goodreads review by Pavan on September 27, 2021

This book investigates how permanent surveillance is now prevalent in our everyday lives, and why this threatens our individual civil rights and out democratic way of governance The author targets new technological breakthroughs over the past decade as the reason for the massive use of surveillance b......more

Goodreads review by Leonardo on December 16, 2020

I would like to thank [[NetGalley]] and the author Jon Fasman for the opportunity to read this advance copy of the book. This book looks at the various and rapidly expanding aspects of [[surveillance]] technology being deployed in society, and the risks to [[privacy]] they pose. Technology is only as......more


Quotes

"A deeply reported and sometimes chilling look at mass surveillance technologies in the American justice system....This illuminating account issues an essential warning about the rising threat to America's civil liberties."
Publishers Weekly

"An urgent examination of police-state intrusions on the privacy of lawful and law-abiding citizens."—Kirkus Reviews