- The 9/11 report said the database was first delivered in January 2004 and "contains all data that can legally be stored together... (providing) a single access point to several data sources that were previously available only through separate, stove-piped systems."
The FBI has said the database provides FBI agents and analysts with "instant access to photographs, biographical information, physical location information, and financial data for thousands of known and suspected terrorists," according to a March 2005 speech by John E. Lewis, deputy assistant director of the counterterrorism division.
It is scary to this that in a simple click on the keyboard and there is instant access to everything that is a person's background and life. Yeah, I understand the whole thing about we need to give up some of our privacy to gain some security, but all in all there might be some things that I do not want everyone to find out about. Why do they need to know my financial data? How do they decide who goes into these databases? It is a ll a little too much to gain security because some people might be in there that do not need to be in there, and there might be people who are not in there that need to be under more surveillance. 'The Electronic Frontier Foundation has sued the Justice Department for not following the precedents that have been set if these would be coming into effect, one of which is letting the public know what is going on with the database.' I want to be safe and secure, but I do not know if I want to give up all of my privacy for it. But I guess, I have not done anything that I would care if it got out or not. This subject is hard to decide what to think about. I guess I would be willing to give up some freedoms for more security, but not everything. There needs to be lines draw and specified. This maybe hard because what information do you really need and what information you do not need maybe different in every situation.
It is just hard to imagine our worlds being totally put out in a database and making it available for many people to see. My sister had a friend (who was Middle Eastern) who was coming over from England and the US would not allow him to come in because there were 25 men with the same name in the US already and they could not locate one of them, so he was not able to come into the country. This seemed to be unbelievable, yet it was true. They finally found the guy and let him come from England to here. People are starting to be guilty before proven innocent instead of the way our justice system to based on by being innocent until proven guilty. I guess with all of these databases we are going to be watched more closely, even though right now it is not being used for everyone just who the government feels needs to be watched. How is that decision made? Where is privacy and security going to meet? After 9/11, our security and our feeling of being safe went away, but with time I think that nation will gain that safety and security back. Hopefully in the years to come, the feeling of being safe in our own homes will be back and every time you see an airplane you will not think that maybe someone is on there planning on killing thousands of people and even though our extent of privacy maybe less, many people will be safer and more secure in their nation.