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Raytheon makes it easier for the government to track you

By | February 12, 2013, 4:30 AM PST

Defense contractor Raytheon has developed a software tool that can peer into social media accounts, like Twitter, Facebook and Foursquare, and mine that data to watch, and more importantly, predict, future behavior.

The Guardian obtained a video demonstration of the software, known as RIOT, or rapid information overlay technology, developed by the Massachusetts-based defense contractor.

Raytheon says it has not sold the software. However, it has shared the tech with the U.S. government and industry as part of a joint research and development effort in 2010 that aimed to build a national security system capable of analyzing “trillions of entities” from cyberspace, reported the Guardian.

Data from Twitter might not reveal much. But aggregating data from a variety of social media sites can provide a detailed view–your mug included–of how you spend your day. For instance, the tool cannot only map out where you’ve been on Google Earth, but collect the location data from photos you’ve taken and uploaded as well.

By sifting through data in your various social media accounts, RIOT can determine what you look like, where and when you check into specific places–in the company’s demonstration it was an employee’s habitual workouts at a gym–and how often, including the time, you frequent that place.

The U.S. government has shown a strong interest in this type of technology. As VentureBeat notes, the FBI put out a request for proposals last year for a tool that could spider different social networks, collecting keywords to identify current emergency situations and predict future ones.

Photo: Stock.xchng

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Kirsten Korosec

About Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec

Contributing Editor

Kirsten Korosec has written for Technology Review, Marketing News, The Hill, BNET and Bloomberg News. She holds a degree from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. She is based in Tucson, Arizona.

Follow her on Twitter.

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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+5 Votes
+ -
Person of Interest
Mr. Finch,
I know you are out there somewhere. Hope your day is going well, but of course you already knew I would wish you a good day!
Posted by rcmarcotte
12th Feb
+1 Vote
+ -
that's funny!
ha ha ha! My first thoughts exactly rcmarcotte!!
Posted by t0mmyt@...
12th Feb
+1 Vote
+ -
He who forgets the past
Does the acronym COINTELPRO or Carnivore software ring any bells? We've been down this road before. There always seems to be some government agency or other that feels it is mandatory to track our every action 24/7/365. What are we reading? What are we writing? Who are our friends? And on and on.

I think if we spent half as much time at half as much money on stopping drug smuggling, illegal gun purchases, and human trafficking as we do on spying on our own citizens we'd be a whole lot better off.
Posted by x3456
12th Feb
+1 Vote
+ -
Soon after people read the above article, they will have forgotten
about what they read.

More alarming is the fact that, the vast majority of people won't even be aware that such a software system exists, and that any government is interested in using it, or even a company or an individual.

What is needed as companion information for articles such as the above, is some kind of "fear mongering" that will wake people up to the dangers that such software could bring to their lives. People who aren't aware of the intrusive nature of a lot of the internet, will continue using that internet as if there aren't any repercussions to what people and governments and companies do with the personal information which they gather.

After the report above has been forgotten, more spying and intrusion into the habits of Americans will have been recorded and analyzed. Then, somebody, somewhere, will report on what has transpired and will contain a study reporting about the data gathered and why, but, the great majority of people will remain clueless and in more danger. So, the progression of gathering and analyzing personal information and habits, will continue, and people won't care or even be aware.

So, what needs to be done? Like I said above, the whole country needs to be informed about such programs and the data gathering and the purposes. But, the reporting needs to go a step further, and striking fear into the hearts and minds of people needs to occur.
Posted by adornoe
12th Feb
+1 Vote
+ -
"Technology" sucks
All this so called "technology" has a long way to go before it can be trusted. Last week on '48 Hours' they had a story about a couple being murdered. At first it was thought it was due to a neighbor receiving death threats, but Google Earth showed the murdered couple's home when the other man's address was searched. It turned out their son was convicted, but the other issue still stands.

Photos I have taken with my smartphone show they were taken a couple of miles away from the actual location. Anyone who trusts and relies on 'technology' in its current state is a fool!
Posted by Rodo1
Updated - 12th Feb
+1 Vote
+ -
Developing Story; also a person of interest
Mr Finch,

I would also like to wish you good day (unless you would rather not have others telling you what type of day to have). Good Day Sir.
Posted by sully40272
12th Feb
+1 Vote
+ -
Slippery slope
Things like really destabilize society. How many people really want their children growing up to be no more than drones in the Borg collective. This is a threat that guns can't solve, although I'm sure there will those who think the opposite. My point is, I feel there's a lot of people who think when hit it the fan, their stockpile of weapons will defend them, but in the end it's this insidious type of technology that will be our downfall. Technology isn't flawed, it's people. And just like the gun, it's all how you use it that makes it dangerous.
Posted by yooper@...
12th Feb
+1 Vote
+ -
Technology comes from people. therefore, it's flawed.
Which came first? Etc...
Posted by adornoe
12th Feb
-1 Votes
+ -
Tech
Don't post so much crap about yourself, and is this for study of and for public "services" , sell us something or sell us out?
Posted by junietoons
12th Feb
-1 Votes
+ -
Stupid people reading other stupid peoples gibberish.. Yeah I feel safer!!
Garbage in Garbage out.
Posted by Reality Bites
13th Feb
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