FRIDAYEXTRA ! The Daily Astorian Friday, May 13, 2016 Weekend Edition SECURITY/ PRIVACY Author questions how much government surveillance is enough Erick Bengel/The Daily Astorian Kristian Williams, an author and freelance writer, led a group of locals through a discussion of government surveillance, security and privacy at the Astoria Public Library last week as part of the Oregon Humanities Conversation Project. By ERICK BENGEL The Daily Astorian G overnment surveillance, carried out under the banner of security, has advanced so rapidly that society’s customs, expectations and laws regarding privacy have not kept up with the sea change. ¶ The issue is often framed as a zero-sum contest between security and privacy: How much surveillance is enough, and how much is too much? Who decides? Kristian Williams — an author and freelance writer Prevention whose work has focused on how policing, counterinsur- Astoria City Councilor Drew Herzig, echoing writ- gency and government use of torture impacts human rights ers on the topic, pointed out that as citizens have become and civil liberties — posed these questions to a group gath- more transparent to the government, the government has ered at the Astoria Public Library last week. become less transparent to citizens. “I think, unless our understanding — both What do they get in return? Is blan- collectively and individually — starts to ket surveillance effective at preventing ‘What is advance very rapidly, we’re not going to crime? Doesn’t seem to be, according to it about get to make choices, even as a society, Williams. about whether privacy exists. It will just For example, in the time since Lon- this idea be gone, because of our inattention and don installed tens of thousands of secu- sort of cultural lag,” he warned. rity cameras, crime hasn’t decreased at of having The event, “Keeping Tabs on America,” all, he said. (But there has been a rise in part of the ongoing Oregon Humanities unobserved criminals wearing masks while commit- Conversation Project, drew locals concerned ting crimes.) space, or about the scope of government surveillance, And since there aren’t employees and who questioned whether screening every watching all of the security footage in real cellphone call and peering into every private unobserved time, oftentimes the best law enforce- life was an effective, or socially desirable, ment can do is identify and catch crim- time, that way to keep Americans safe. inals after the fact by retracing their Though some attendees stood up for movements. we find surveillance, casting it as a “necessary In other words, the surveillance valuable?’ evil,” they were the outliers in the crowd. information is often more useful for Almost everyone agreed that the forensic rather than preventative post-9/11 surveillance apparatus is not purposes. Kristian Williams author and going away anytime soon, and that the The same is true at the U.S. freelance writer loss of privacy — from corporations National Security Agency (whose tracking customers’ purchasing habits, unoficial motto is “Collect it all”). The to living under the expanding gaze of security cameras and agency gathers and stores such an overwhelming amount smartphones — is something younger generations aren’t of electronic info that it is impossible to analyze every data as worried about; in the social media age, they grow up point. But when the NSA knows what it’s looking for, it acclimated to lives of full disclosure. can sift through its storage and nose it out. “They tend to be on the side of, ‘I don’t understand what the big deal is. I live my life online,’” Williams said. See SURVEILLANCE, Page 3C