What A Day - Location Sharing With Homeland Security
Episode Date: July 19, 2022Heat waves are devastating people in Europe and North America this summer. In the U.K. it’s hotter than the Sahara Desert, and in the U.S. 35 million Americans are currently living in places with ex...cessive heat warnings this week.The ACLU published “thousands of pages of previously unreleased records” on Monday about the government surreptitiously collecting people’s private information without a warrant. The report shows that the Department of Homeland Security — including border protection and ICE — buys access to data from hundreds of millions of phones.And in headlines: a West Virginia judge blocked the enforcement of the state’s 150-year-old abortion ban, Uber settled a discrimination lawsuit, and Steve Bannon’s trial started.Show Notes:Politico: “Homeland Security records show 'shocking' use of phone data, ACLU says” – https://politi.co/3cp2K98The Intercept: “Amazon Admits Give Ring Camera Footage To Police Without A Warrant Or Consent” – https://bit.ly/3csQLrfAARP: “Help Someone Staying Cool in Extreme Heat” – https://bit.ly/3cq1CSrVote Save America: Fuck Bans Action Plan – https://votesaveamerica.com/roe/Crooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, July 19th. I'm Erin Ryan.
And I'm Josie Duffy Rice. And this is What a Day,
where we promise we will never have a beef that tears us apart like Desus and Mero.
I refuse to believe that those two are beefing.
And I refuse to believe that you and I will ever beef.
We will never beef. Beef is over.
Beef isn't very climate conscious, is it?
On today's show, the ACLU reports that the federal government has been getting access to people's phone data without warrants.
Plus, Dr. Fauci announces that when Biden's term ends, he's finally going to retire.
But first, it's hot.
I can say that with a fair degree of authority. If you are listening to
this podcast in either Europe or North America, it's hotter wherever you are than it should be.
Yeah, it is not good news to hear that just like multiple continents are just burning up.
I don't love it.
No, there's no way to really spin it. You know that like little cartoon of the sun wearing sunglasses and he's all chill like, yeah, everybody have a great summer. Like
the sun now is the Babadook face. But on the sun, there is nothing good happening from the heat
source above us. So let's start with the UK where it is literally hotter than the Sahara Desert.
On Monday, temperatures topped over 100 degrees Fahrenheit and are likely going to rise even higher today,
possibly breaking a record for hottest temperature ever in that country.
The previous record was set only three years ago, when the temperature hit 102 degrees Fahrenheit in Cambridge.
This heat wave marks the first time ever that the UK has been under a red heat alert. It was so hot on Monday that one runway at London's Luton Airport literally melted.
A airport runway melted.
It's like a Salvador Dali painting, but it's our lives.
Yes, and in Wales, they've already seen their highest temperatures ever on record this month.
And in the Gironde region of southern France,
about 35,000 acres have burned
because of wildfires forcing the evacuation of 31,000 people. Spain is also on fire. While
firefighters have gotten control of fires in the southern Malaga region, wildfires continue to rage
in the Castile and León regions as well as in the north. Portugal had already been suffering an
extreme drought and soaring temperatures have only made things worse. Overall, officials estimate that across Southern Europe, over 1,100 people have died so far
as a result of the infernal-like temperatures. 1,100 people just in Southern Europe died.
From heat. From heat. From heat. Right. The inside of a human body can't get much hotter
than 103 or 104 degrees right without things shutting down
right so when the air outside is hotter than the hottest temperature the inside of a human body can
be that is really really bad really bad so is there like an end in sight perhaps or so there's
a pause in sight but maybe not an end so temperatures are expected to peak this week
which means relief from this wave,
which is great if you're living underneath it. But troubling trends indicate that these
temperatures may soon be the new norm because we have to say it, climate change is real.
All 10 of the UK's hottest years on record have been since the year 2000. Temperatures around the
world have been climbing for decades and scientists have been warning us that this was on the way.
Yeah. And one thing that I think a lot of people don't maybe know is that like in Europe, in the
UK, most buildings don't have air conditioning. Exactly. So, you know, here in the US, you know,
you live in a big city, in New York City, for example, they don't have air conditioning units
in a lot of places, but you can buy one, put it in, it's normal. You can go down to the bodega,
your car has air conditioning. There are places all around you with AC. Europe is old. The infrastructure is old and they never counted
on temperatures being this hot. Right. But even in parts of the world where air conditioning is
more standard, like in the central U.S., things are dangerous right now. 35 million Americans
are currently living in places with excessive heat warnings this week. We're talking temperatures as high as 110 degrees from Southern California to Arizona, New Mexico, Kansas, Colorado, the Dakotas, Arkansas, and places in between.
The danger here is for people who have difficulty accessing air conditioning and people who work outdoors like farm workers.
Cities are also rough places to be as buildings spend all day
absorbing heat from the sun and all night radiating the heat back out. It's also a dangerous time to
live in Texas, where the state's rickety-ass power grid is about to be put to another test
under life-threatening heat. This is yet another problem that people in power saw coming,
but rather than fixing real problems facing Texans, Republican Governor Greg Abbott
is trying to get into as many culture war slap fights as he can so he can campaign for president
on Tucker Carlson's show. Sorry, I'm getting off topic, but fuck that guy. Truly, Republican
elected officials are spending all their time talking about the danger of trans kids so that
they don't actually have to do anything and govern and can just govern through hate. So we know who to call when it turns out to be 130 degrees in this country.
Not them.
Not them.
Yeah, no, not, just call to yell at them, not call to solve the problem.
Sure, sure, exactly.
So are there any like heat wave tips you have for listeners?
So you should drink more water than you think you need to if you're living in a place
that is really hot even if you don't feel thirsty you should stay out of the direct sunlight wear a
hat if you can't avoid being in the sun avoid the upper floor of a building heat rises so basement
good penthouse bad attic bad keep your windows closed and your curtains drawn and move air around
with fans learn to recognize the signs of heat stroke and heat exhaustion in yourself and others and keep an eye out. Ask people if
they're okay. Like if there are people working outside and somebody looks like they're not okay,
ask them if they're okay. Check for cooling locations in your area. A lot of cities
have them and yours might be one of them. Check in on elderly or vulnerable neighbors.
It's much better to be safe than sorry in these cases.
And make sure that kids and pets are able to keep cool and hydrated as well.
So we have a stray cat that loves to walk through our yard just as part of his little daily rounds.
And he likes to stop and drink water from a dish that is sometimes on our stairs.
And I made sure that the water dish was filled.
So if you have like strays that you feed or anything like that,
make sure that they have enough water to drink.
And he did stop by recently, took a drink of water and then peed in my front yard.
So he feels at home.
He feels comfortable.
That's a real thank you from that stray cat.
Another reminder to also check in on unhoused people and make sure, because obviously it's never great to be unhoused, but this is particularly terrible conditions for people who don't have shelter.
Okay, so let's turn to another big story to follow.
Yesterday, the ACLU published, quote, thousands of pages of previously unreleased records about the government surreptitiously collecting people's private information without a warrant.
The material released by the ACLU
shows the Department of Homeland Security,
including Customs of Border Protection and ICE,
quote, buying access to and using huge volumes
of people's cell phone location information
quietly extracted from smartphone apps.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
Black Mirror is real.
It's so real.
So what level of data collection are we talking about here?
How many people and how many locations?
Well, the truth is, Erin, that we don't quite know just yet the actual total.
We kind of only know what's in these documents, which includes the data that was released
to the ACLU after they filed their
Freedom of Information Act request. But that alone is enough. So this data makes it clear
that Homeland Security had access to data from hundreds of millions of phones. The ACLU got
access to some of that data, which showed 336,000 location data points across North America,
collected by Customs and Border Protection or CBP.
That means that the data didn't only come from the U.S., but also from Canada and Mexico.
And in just three days in 2018, CBP collected data from more than 113,000 locations from phones
in just the southwestern U.S., which Politico points out is equivalent to more than 26 data
points per minute. They did all of that without obtaining a warrant.
And again, that's probably the very, very, very, very, very tip of the iceberg, right?
Oh my goodness. That's so much information. That is so much information that unless they
have a way to index it and search it, that's like a useless amount of information.
It's useless until they have a question they need answered and then it's useful
so who was where when you know oh my gosh when you think about how this could be used i think about
the end of row like what government officials are searching who's at what abortion clinic or
who's at a certain place that maybe correlates with their pregnancy status like it's just like
so much data that it's like what's the point until there's a point?
Yeah, so how did Homeland Security get this data?
And did they directly pull that information
from users' phones or what?
Yeah, it's a really good question.
How it usually works is this.
People give apps on their phone permission
to collect data, including location data.
Often they don't realize they're granting that permission.
Then surveillance companies, slash what the ACLU calls, quote, shadowy data brokers like
Babel Street and Vintel, those are the two mentioned in the documents released yesterday,
they collect that information from the apps. And then those companies sell it to government
agencies. So Homeland Security and probably other agencies too, at some point, they're using taxpayer dollars to buy private information about people without getting a
warrant first. And again, this isn't rare, right? I mean, according to the ACLU, one of these sketchy
data companies, Vintel, sent marketing materials to Homeland Security, quote, explaining how the
company collects more than 15 billion location points from over 250 million cell phones and other mobile
devices every day. That's too many location points. I'm just going to go out on a limb here
and say that's too many location points. I would not have guessed that we were collectively going
15 billion points a day. That just seems bananas to me. That seems absolutely bananas. These marketing
materials also boasted that with this data, law enforcement can, quote, identify devices observed
at places of interest, end quote, identify repeat visitors, frequented locations, pinpoint known
associates, and discover a pattern of life. Okay, so Josie, remember how I mentioned the stray cat
earlier, right? Yes, yes, bring it back,
bring it back. I've got a brainstorm solution to this as Americans. We can fight this outside of
the legal system by simply strapping our cell phones to stray cats, right? Or adding a stray
cat to our family plan. That is true. Yeah, find an animal, tie your cell phone to that animal,
feed the animal, nourish the animal, give the animal a place to sleep.
Right.
But also, like, put that animal on your family plan to confuse the feds.
No, I mean, all joking aside, is this legal?
And if so, how?
It kind of depends on who you ask, at least at this point.
I mean, the ACLU would say no, it's not legal.
My personal opinion is no, it's not legal. Obviously, these companies are justifying this somehow, right? And it seems
that they're basically like skirting the law on a technicality. So they justify it by saying that
the data is associated with the phone's, quote, numerical identifier instead of a name. Of course,
all you need to do is connect the name to the numerical identifier, and then there you go.
And as the ACLU points out, quote, the
entire purpose of this data is to be able to identify and track people. So the idea that like,
this data can be used to track doesn't make any sense. Also, the companies claim that the data is
quote, 100% opt in. But as we said earlier, most of us have no idea what data our apps are collecting
and when. And even if we did, we didn't expect to be handing over that data to the Department of Homeland
Security. And this is important because four years ago, the Supreme Court ruled that the
government needs a warrant to access location history from a person's cell phone. And they
specifically said that that was because these records can give information about, quote,
privacies of life. And yet here's Homeland Security paying millions of dollars to have
access to billions of those exact data points, no warrant in sight.
So like, if this is somehow technically legal, it just should not be. The Homeland Security employees themselves seem to recognize that. In one internal briefing document, the department
acknowledged that, quote, the legal policy and privacy reviews have not always kept pace with
the new and evolving technologies. And at least one senior director showed concern that the Vintel
data never met the necessary privacy threshold assessment. Wow, this is a really great example of how
it is really important for our elected officials to be in a demographic that understands the
technology that they should be regulating. And I think the average senator is 64.3 years old. And
I know that because I just needed that stat earlier this week for something I wrote. I think
we need fewer people in elected positions in the US who need their email printed out. And more
people who understand what technology is, what it does, and what it could be used for. I think
that's right. And I think the other thing is is there's a lot of money to be made in selling data, right?
And there's a lot less money to be made
in regulating the selling of data
or stopping the selling of data.
And so like one thing to just remember is
this is an industry.
It recruits some of the smartest tech people in the world
to make sure that like you have no privacy
so that governments
or other companies can exploit what they know about you and like it's really hard to go back
this is concerning for so many reasons so this is just the latest in a series of concerning stories
about companies collecting data and sharing it often with law enforcement we're going to link
some of these stories to you in our show notes so that you can read more get concerned
and be convinced to look back to see what permissions you gave the apps on your phone.
And that's the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads.
Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
A West Virginia judge blocked the enforcement of the state's 150-year-old abortion ban yesterday.
The 19th century ban couldn't be enforced under Roe v. Wade,
but the Supreme Court's ruling last month made its enforcement a possibility again.
The ban makes performing or receiving an abortion a felony that could result in up to a decade in prison.
It provides an exception if the pregnant person's life is at risk, but not for rape or incest.
Thankfully, on Monday, a state judge agreed that this law is outdated, overly vague, and obsolete.
In a lawsuit, West Virginia's one and only abortion clinic had argued that its more recent laws guarantee abortion access in the state.
Because of this win, that clinic can reopen its doors and resume procedures for now.
The state's Republican attorney general said his office will appeal the decision in West Virginia's Supreme Court.
The trial of the gunman in the 2018 Parkland school shooting began yesterday in Florida. The jury in the case is set to decide whether or not the shooter receives a death penalty or a life sentence without the possibility
of parole after he pleaded guilty to all the charges against him. Worth noting that public
support for the death penalty is at a half century low right now. Prosecutors gave opening statements
yesterday focusing on the 17 lives that were lost in one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history. The trial will likely continue for months. Uber agreed to settle a
Justice Department lawsuit yesterday that accused the ride-sharing company of discrimination against
passengers with disabilities. Last year, the DOJ alleged Uber violated the Americans with
Disabilities Act because the company charged those passengers wait time fees when they took longer than two
minutes to get into the car, though their mobility was limited. Under the terms of the over $2 million
settlement, the ethically slippery rideshare company will waive wait time fees for riders
with disabilities. Uber also agreed to refund claimants twice the amount they were wrongfully
charged. I'm just going to say a key takeaway is do not fuck with
the ADA. It's true. And also another key takeaway is it's always good when Uber gets sued. Total
agreement. Jury selection began yesterday in the trial of Steve Bannon, Trump's former advisor,
and our best guess for what it would look like if the life is good guy had an antichrist.
Bannon was indicted on contempt of Congress charges last year for refusing to
speak to the House January 6th committee. He tried to delay his trial twice, going so far as to say
he would talk to the committee to avoid litigation last week. But a judge rejected his request and
gave prosecutors the go ahead to move forward with their case yesterday. Wow, what a setback
for President Andrew Jackson left to rot in a bog for 10 days
and reanimated. We love Ben and insults. We love him. Human bog. The man who has been our extremely
gravelly voice of reason through large parts of the pandemic, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said yesterday
that he plans to retire soon. And after serving as the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984,
it's safe to say he's earned it.
Here's Fauci on CNN talking about his plans.
I don't see myself being in this job to the point where I can't do anything else after that.
Don't go to grad school, Dr. Fauci.
Don't go to an additional grad school.
Fauci didn't confirm exactly to an additional grad school. That's all.
Fauci didn't confirm exactly when he'll step down,
but a spokesperson for the National Institute said that he doesn't plan to stick around after 2025 when Biden finishes his current term.
You know, I feel like if you became the head of the National Institute of Allergy,
you would never expect for you to be the most controversial person in the country.
Yeah, it seems like a very uncontroversial position, you would never expect for you to be the most controversial person in the country.
Yeah, it seems like a very uncontroversial position,
but, you know, we're living in unprecedented times.
It's true.
Sensing that politicians were getting too much of the blame for failing to slow global warming,
makeup queenpin Kylie Jenner recently jumped in to volunteer as tribute.
She posted a picture this weekend with her boyfriend Travis Scott
in front of their two private jets, captioned, quote, want to take mine or yours?
Ostentatious displays of wealth on Instagram are usually encouraged, but this one struck a nerve, particularly since private jets are such heavy polluters, burning 40 times as much carbon per passenger as commercial flights, according to some estimates. Things got worse for Kylie when members of Twitter's self-appointed air traffic control board found records of her private jet traveling from Camarillo, California to Van Nuys,
California earlier this month. Those places are about 40 minutes apart by car, though Kylie made
the trip in just three minutes. Okay, so she made the trip in three minutes, but she had to get to
the airport, had to board the airport. There's no way she saved more than like, I'm going to say
seven to 10 minutes maximum.
Best case scenario.
Totally.
You know, when I lived in Chicago,
my family's in the Minneapolis area,
but they're an hour and a half from Minneapolis.
So like when I figured in door to door trip time,
it was almost more sensible for me to drive.
Of course.
In most cases, because it's like,
I have to drive to the airport,
park my car, get to the terminal, get onto the plane, you know, all that stuff.
The flight itself, landing, waiting to be picked up, all that.
I don't understand.
There is no logic to this.
None.
None.
I don't understand.
The super rich have no sense of economy.
I know.
They have no common sense.
No.
That's why we should eat them.
Yeah.
Honestly, Kylie, sorry. We're eating you, Kylie. We're eating you. It's not sense. No, that's why we should eat them. Yeah. Honestly, Kylie, sorry.
We're eating you, Kylie.
We're eating you.
It's not personal.
No, no, no, no.
But it's really hot outside and you're part of the reason.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
This week on Hot Take, Mary welcomes guest hosts and my former colleague, Ko Bragg, Scalawag's Race and Place editor.
They're joined by Amal Ahmed, a disaster reporter for Southerly,
to explore disaster relief, disaster theater, and the problems with the idea of resilience,
especially focused on the South.
This is going to be amazing.
New episodes of Hot Take drop each Friday.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts.
That's all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
support the one true life is good, and tell your friends to listen. And if you're into reading and not just the Jenner flight logs like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at cricket.com slash subscribe.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
I'm Erin Ryan.
And don't get senioritis, Dr. Fauci.
What does a doctor with senioritis do?
Just showing up to work late, leaving early, drinking beers on the job.
Like novelty scrubs?
Novelty scrubs.
I'm going to miss him.
His voice, too.
He's so exasperated.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
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