Skating on Stilts: Why We Aren't Stopping Tomorrow's Terrorism: Hoover Institution Press Publication
Autor Stewart A. Bakeren Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 iun 2010
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Stewart A. Baker examines the technologies we love–jet travel, computer networks, and biotech–and finds that they are likely to empower new forms of terrorism unless we change our current course a few degrees and overcome resistance to change from business, foreign governments, and privacy advocates. He draws on his Homeland Security experience to show how that was done in the case of jet travel and border security but concludes that heading off disasters in computer networks and biotech will require a hardheaded recognition that privacy must sometimes yield to security, especially as technology changes the risks to both.
In a lively memoir, the author tells how he overcame the European Union’s privacy campaign against U.S. security measures in the wake of 9/11 and built a new border security strategy based on better information about travelers. He explains how that approach would deal with air security risks such as Umar Abdulmutallab (the “Christmas Day Bomber”). He admits to failures as well, showing how the privacy and business lobbies that guard the status quo were able to defeat attempts at increased Internet security and stronger regulation of biotechnology. Instead of fighting all technologies that strengthen government, he concludes, privacy campaigners must look for ways to protect privacy by working with technology, not against it.
In a lively memoir, the author tells how he overcame the European Union’s privacy campaign against U.S. security measures in the wake of 9/11 and built a new border security strategy based on better information about travelers. He explains how that approach would deal with air security risks such as Umar Abdulmutallab (the “Christmas Day Bomber”). He admits to failures as well, showing how the privacy and business lobbies that guard the status quo were able to defeat attempts at increased Internet security and stronger regulation of biotechnology. Instead of fighting all technologies that strengthen government, he concludes, privacy campaigners must look for ways to protect privacy by working with technology, not against it.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780817911546
ISBN-10: 0817911545
Pagini: 360
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Ediția:1st Edition
Editura: Hoover Institution Press
Colecția Hoover Institution Press
Seria Hoover Institution Press Publication
ISBN-10: 0817911545
Pagini: 360
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Ediția:1st Edition
Editura: Hoover Institution Press
Colecția Hoover Institution Press
Seria Hoover Institution Press Publication
Notă biografică
Stewart A. Baker was the first assistant secretary for policy at the United States Department of Homeland Security and the former general counsel of the National Security Agency.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
In the years after 9/11, officials scrambled to rethink security at the border and in the air--while privacy groups and foreign governments did their best to stop and then roll back security measures. As a result, we have only partially closed gaping security holes. Worse, the resistance has made it all but impossible to head off other disasters that are inherent in new technologies such as computer networks and biotech.
In Skating on Stilts, Stewart A. Baker draws on his experience at Homeland Security to give the reader a ringside seat as the battle unfolds. In a lively memoir, he describes his agency’s post-9/11 strategy to rebuild border security on a foundation of better information about travelers, and the bitter resistance the strategy met from privacy campaigners in the United States and Europe. He shows how a left-right privacy coalition helped set the stage for the Christmas Day bombing.
Looking to the future, Baker examines two new technologies that carry within them the seeds of disasters more damaging than 9/11. As with border security, we can avoid catastrophe by changing our current course a few degrees, building prudent new security measures around information networks and biotechnology. But that course faces stiff resistance from the same groups that fought new security measures after 9/11. Baker argues that privacy campaigners should abandon their stance of opposing all new government uses of technology. Instead of fighting the inevitable in the name of privacy, we should embrace new technologies that offer new ways to protect citizens from abuse.
In Skating on Stilts, Stewart A. Baker draws on his experience at Homeland Security to give the reader a ringside seat as the battle unfolds. In a lively memoir, he describes his agency’s post-9/11 strategy to rebuild border security on a foundation of better information about travelers, and the bitter resistance the strategy met from privacy campaigners in the United States and Europe. He shows how a left-right privacy coalition helped set the stage for the Christmas Day bombing.
Looking to the future, Baker examines two new technologies that carry within them the seeds of disasters more damaging than 9/11. As with border security, we can avoid catastrophe by changing our current course a few degrees, building prudent new security measures around information networks and biotechnology. But that course faces stiff resistance from the same groups that fought new security measures after 9/11. Baker argues that privacy campaigners should abandon their stance of opposing all new government uses of technology. Instead of fighting the inevitable in the name of privacy, we should embrace new technologies that offer new ways to protect citizens from abuse.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Part One: The Road to 9/11
Introduction: The Gift
1 Skating on Stilts
2 Atta’s Soldier
3 To the Wall
4 Never Again
Part Two: Flight and Facts
5 Europe Picks a Privacy Fight
6 To the Brink
7 Al Qaeda’s Frequent Traveler Program
8 Privacy Victims in the Air
Part Three: Tomorrow’s Terrorism
9 Moore’s Outlaws
10 Big Brother’s Revenge
11 Invested in Insecurity
12 Smallpox in the Garage
Part Four: The Privacy Problem
13 What’s Wrong with Privacy?
14 Privacy for the Real World
Endnotes
About the Author
Index
Part One: The Road to 9/11
Introduction: The Gift
1 Skating on Stilts
2 Atta’s Soldier
3 To the Wall
4 Never Again
Part Two: Flight and Facts
5 Europe Picks a Privacy Fight
6 To the Brink
7 Al Qaeda’s Frequent Traveler Program
8 Privacy Victims in the Air
Part Three: Tomorrow’s Terrorism
9 Moore’s Outlaws
10 Big Brother’s Revenge
11 Invested in Insecurity
12 Smallpox in the Garage
Part Four: The Privacy Problem
13 What’s Wrong with Privacy?
14 Privacy for the Real World
Endnotes
About the Author
Index
Descriere
Stewart A. Baker, a former Homeland Security official, examines the technologies we love–jet travel, computer networks, and biotech–and finds that they are likely to empower new forms of terrorism unless we change our current course a few degrees and overcome resistance to change from business, foreign governments, and privacy advocates.
Premii
- IndieFab awards Bronze Medal Winner, 2010