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How the FBI can conduct mass surveillance – even without AI

about 8 hours ago
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The FBI declares it can conduct mass surveillance without AI, despite Anthropic’s protest.A central part of the standoff between Anthropic and the Department of Defense has revolved around the artificial intelligence firm’s refusal to allow its technology to be used for mass domestic surveillance.Yet even without the cooperation of AI firms, remarks this week from Kash Patel, FBI director, show how authorities are by any reasonable measure already operating a system that can surveil citizens at scale.On Wednesday, Patel confirmed to a Senate intelligence committee hearing that the FBI is actively buying commercially available data on Americans.Patel’s answer, which was under oath, was in response to a question from senator Ron Wyden on whether the agency was purchasing location data on citizens, as it had previously admitted to doing in 2023.

As the debate around how the US federal government uses AI has come to the forefront in recent months, it has also brought renewed attention to how authorities already possess vast capabilities for tracking and surveilling the public.Patel’s admission underscores how the government is able to conduct mass surveillance despite its assurances to abide by lawful use of AI and fourth amendment protections against unreasonable searches, which prohibit the warrantless collection of individuals’ location histories.Federal law enforcement agencies generally must obtain a warrant to gather historical or real-time cellphone location data, which requires establishing probable cause in the eyes of a judge.While the supreme court ruled in 2018 that law enforcement could not coerce companies into disclosing information such as cell phone location records, the court did not explicitly prohibit authorities from purchasing data that included that information and more.Through contracting a network of data brokers that amass information from apps, web browsers and other online sources, federal authorities have been able to access information that it would otherwise need a warrant to obtain.

Buying such information, usually en masse, can circumvent this requirement, leading many privacy advocates to label the practice unconstitutional.The data broker industry, which is worth hundreds of billions globally, is part of the lifeblood of modern marketing and targeted advertisements.Information on the demographics, browsing habits, locations and other identifying information of consumers is a valuable commodity that has also always carried the potential for misuse.Privacy advocates, researchers and journalists have long documented how information from data brokers can be used to determine private details of citizens without their knowledge, including sensitive personal data such as health conditions and precise locations.In 2019, the New York Times used a large set of smartphone location data to demonstrate how easy it was to track and determine the identity of almost anyone using this ostensibly anonymized data – in one case identifying a senior defense department official and his wife based on their daily movements.

Fears over use of data brokers being used to engineer mass surveillance have intensified in recent years as AI technology has made it easier to parse and cross reference vast datasets.The expanded capabilities that AI provides are also combined with efforts from government agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security and Elon Musk’s so-called “department of government efficiency”, to build a master dataset for uses that include targeting immigrants, Wired reported in April.The use of this data has real-world consequences going back years.During ICE’s mass deportation efforts, 404 Media reported last year that the agency turned to surveillance systems that used commercially available data to monitor neighborhoods and track people to their homes or places of work based on their phone locations.In 2024, a company allegedly tracked nearly 600 visits to Planned Parenthood locations to provide the data for a massive anti-abortion ad campaign.

During Anthropic’s standoff with the Pentagon, the company’s CEO Dario Amodei discussed in a blog post how data brokers contribute to the risk that AI could be used for mass surveillance, one of the focal points of the fight.“Under current law, the government can purchase detailed records of Americans’ movements, web browsing, and associations from public sources without obtaining a warrant,” Amodei wrote, adding: “Powerful AI makes it possible to assemble this scattered, individually innocuous data into a comprehensive picture of any person’s life–automatically and at massive scale.”Amodei’s post also highlights how the Pentagon’s demand that AI companies allow “any lawful use” of their products is vague enough that it could include the mass surveillance of citizens.Through the data broker loophole, analyzing the detailed personal information of Americans would not violate any privacy or surveillance laws – a dynamic that Wyden described as “an outrageous end run around the fourth amendment”.OpenAI, which signed a contract with the Department of Defense following Anthropic’s refusal to comply with Pentagon demands, initially left a grey area in the deal around AI using commercial data.

Following backlash, the company added a caveat to the agreement that its AI system “shall not be intentionally used for domestic surveillance of U,S,persons and nationals”,“The Department understands this limitation to prohibit deliberate tracking, surveillance, or monitoring of U,S.

persons or nationals, including through the procurement or use of commercially acquired personal or identifiable information,” OpenAI stated in a post following the deal.Yet some digital privacy experts have expressed skepticism that this addendum is strong enough to prevent AI being used in mass surveillance operations, pointing to the words “intentionally” and “deliberate” in the language of the deal.In the past, the government has argued that their possession of personal information is an incidental byproduct of using such large data sets – a grey area that privacy advocates argue allows them to continue a years-long pattern of domestic surveillance operations.
cultureSee all
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Driven to the right side of the road? | Brief letters

From the answer to question five of The kids’ quiz (14 March), we learn that people in Britain drive on the left-hand side of the road to keep their right hand free for sword fighting. Does that mean that just about everywhere else in the world people drive on the right-hand side of the road to keep their left hand free for shield wielding?Simon ChapmanMarseille, France In the Saturday quiz (14 March), Glengarry Glen Ross is named as one of four “films with no female characters”. In fact the film does credit “Coat check girl”, played by Lori Tan Chinn, who delivers the immortal line: “Slow tonight.”Rendel HarrisLondon On children fibbing (Letters, 19 March), my brother, the late Tom Hibbert (of Smash Hits, Q magazine and Observer fame), showed early promise of invention when asked by our mother how a large tear in his trousers had appeared. He replied rather scornfully: “Haven’t you heard of moths what eat holes in people’s clothes?”Jimmy Hibbert Porthmadog, Gwynedd Somebody should advise Robin, who said he was looking for someone 5ft 6in tall, what my father once said to me (Blind date, 14 March)

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump Pearl Harbor joke: ‘Everything he knows about it begins and ends with the Ben Affleck movie’

With The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on hiatus until at least 27 March, late-night hosts on Thursday discussed Donald Trump’s snafu while meeting Japan’s prime minister, his caginess over Iran, and new findings in the Epstein investigations.On Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the host discussed Trump’s visit to Japan and meeting with Sanae Takaichi. As a welcome gift, the prime minister presented the US president with 250 cherry trees to commemorate the upcoming 250th US anniversary.“This is a guy who paved over the Rose Garden,” commented Kimmel. “What is he going to do with 250 cherry trees? He’ll probably use them to build a Waffle House or something

1 day ago
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A bust of Barbra Streisand and beautiful memories: Richard E Grant’s garden – in seven extraordinary items

The actor has played many classic roles and his love of film is clear in his garden, from the Saltburn proscenium arch to the pergola where Meryl Streep and Paul Rudd have partied the night away Step into Richard E Grant’s garden in Richmond, London, and you’ll be met with a rather unconventional sight. Instead of the daffodils and tulips you’d usually find in an English garden at this time of year, Grant’s space is full of props and decorations from the films he’s starred in – from Saltburn to Carrie Cracknell’s 2022 adaptation of Persuasion.After any job, he says, “I go to the production department and try and buy or bribe my way” to get pieces to put in his garden. The space has, until now, been a private spot for Grant to entertain his actor friends. But now he has shared it with the world as part of the Royal Horticultural Society’s new podcast, Roots

1 day ago
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Natural History Museum tops UK attraction list with record visitors

London’s Natural History Museum (NHM) was the most popular attraction in the UK during 2025, with its renovated gardens, new climate gallery and lack of entry fee leading to record-breaking numbers of visitors.More than 7.1 million people passed through its doors, a 13% increase in visitors year on year and an all-time record for any UK museum or gallery.Bernard Donoghue, the director of the Association for Leading Visitor Attractions (Alva), which compiles the annual ranking, said the NHM’s success was partly down to its renovated outdoor spaces.“It’s an astonishingly fun, joyful day out and it’s free,” Donoghue said

2 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on DHS pick Markwayne Mullin: ‘Has a history of being real dumb and real angry about it’

Late-night hosts recapped Markwayne Mullin’s risible confirmation hearing for homeland security secretary and Maga’s struggles to sell the war in Iran to sticker-shocked Americans.On Wednesday’s Late Show, Stephen Colbert looked into the resignation this week of Joe Kent, Donald Trump’s director of the national counterterrorism center, in protest of the administration’s war in Iran and the fact that “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation”.“So the US is going to war in the Middle East without an imminent threat to our nation … AGAIN?” Colbert joked, sitcom-style.“Now, before anybody sends this guy an Edible Arrangement in the shape of the word ‘hero’, keep in mind: he sucks,” he continued, before reminding viewers that during his failed 2022 congressional bid, Kent paid Graham Jorgensen, a member of the Proud Boys, for consulting work, and worked closely with Joey Gibson, founder of the rightwing group Patriot Prayer. Kent has also blamed Israel for the 2003 US invasion of Iraq

2 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump’s Nato about-face: ‘This is just how Donald Trump does friendship’

Late-night hosts mocked Donald Trump’s rejection by Nato allies for help with the strait of Hormuz and a White House visit from the Irish prime minister for St Patrick’s Day.On Late Night, Seth Meyers recalled the many, many times that Trump insulted Nato, only to turn around and ask them this week for help with strait of Hormuz, blocked by his war with Iran. “You called them obsolete, sloppy and bad, and now you want their help?” Meyers marveled. “It’s like breaking up with someone and then immediately asking them for help moving – ‘I know I called you obsolete and sloppy, but I didn’t say you were bad at carrying things! Now hop to it, fatso, I gotta date tonight!’”The response from Nato members has been a resounding no, even from US allies like Germany and Britain. “You mean to tell me your genius plan of continually insulting them for 10-plus years and then begging them to help you out of a jam you got yourself into didn’t work?” Meyers laughed

3 days ago
societySee all
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‘It all feels very natural’: Britain’s sauna boom heats up as people seek warmth of human connection

1 day ago
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House of Lords has ‘signed its own death warrant’ by stalling assisted dying bill, says MP

1 day ago
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Kent meningitis outbreak may have peaked as UKHSA reports slowdown in cases

1 day ago
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The Kent meningitis outbreak: what is happening and why?

1 day ago
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George Nicholson obituary

1 day ago
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Father of meningitis victim, 18, tells of family’s ‘immeasurable’ devastation

1 day ago