Government

America's Border Patrol 'Can Track Everyone's Car' By Buying License Plate-Reader Data (arstechnica.com) 142

America's border-protection agency "can track everyone's cars all over the country thanks to massive troves of automated license plate scanner data, a new report reveals," reports Ars Technica.

And they didn't need to request search warrants from the courts, the article explains, since "the agency did just what hundreds of other businesses and investigators do: straight-up purchase access to commercial databases." U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has been buying access to commercial automated license plate-reader databases since 2017, TechCrunch reports, and the agency says bluntly that there's no real way for any American to avoid having their movements tracked. "CBP cannot provide timely notice of license plate reads obtained from various sources outside of its control," the agency wrote in its most recent privacy assessment. "The only way to opt out of such surveillance is to avoid the impacted area, which may pose significant hardships and be generally unrealistic...."

CBP already buys cell phone location data, even though it would not legally be able to hoover it up on a wide scale directly. Police also purchase hacked and breached data from third-party vendors that they can then use to track and identify individuals in ways that otherwise might have required a warrant.

Although hundreds of jurisdictions nationwide use automated plate-scanning technology, fewer than 20 states have laws of any kind on their books governing the collection, use, and storage of automated license plate-reader (ALPR) data. Even fewer of those laws specify what private entities can collect ALPR data and what can be done with that information. The software also seems to become more granular almost by the day.

Theoretically, CBP only has authority to operate within 100 miles of the US border. The data it purchases, however, may allow it to track any given license plate basically anywhere in the country.

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Comment It's a double-edged sword (Score 1) 196

Of course big companies get a lot of applicants and many of them are equally good. These interviews are often not meant to be inviting, but indeed are the opposite. When HR has to deal with hundreds or even thousands of applications for just a couple of jobs then these tests are as much tests for character as well as skill.

This practise helps to find outstanding applicants, but it also has the tendency to support a work environment of anti-social behaviour simply because a company fills it jobs with a lot of "alphas". It still is more profitable overall for a company's competitiveness to hire strong personalities who don't shy away.

On the other hand do students need to study more than just their books when they want to be successful. Bosses do have a lot of work on their hands and don't necessarily want to carry every new employee on their shoulders and rather wish for people who can hit the ground running.

Doing team sports, helping out in the community, and even serving in the military, are just some ways for people to overcome anxiety and I wish more young people would choose for more diversity in their lives and not end up having to battle anxiety.

Comment If social anxiety is that overwhelming..... (Score 3, Interesting) 196

If social anxiety is that overwhelming to you, then you cannot present your work or defend it when challenged. Your career options are severely limited, and you're quite likely to have your good work wasted because you cannot present or champion it nor can you effectively climb the corporate ladder to leadership positions.

Fortunately, social anxiety is treatable. See https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/b... . The last time I had a candidate blowing the whiteboard part of the interview, obviously flustered, I did let them know we'd had issues with their presentation, and even recommended some training.

Programming

Are Whiteboard Coding Interviews Just Testing For Social Anxiety? (theregister.com) 196

An anonymous reader quotes The Register: People applying for software engineering positions at companies are often asked to solve problems on a whiteboard, under the watchful eye of an interviewer, as a way to assess technical problem solving skills. But recent research suggests that whiteboard technical tests — so daunting to job seekers that there are books on how to deal with them — often fail to assess technical skill, according to new research. Instead, they're all about pressure.

In a paper to be presented later this year at the ACM Joint European Software Engineering Conference and Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering, researchers from North Carolina State University and Microsoft in the U.S. argue that whiteboard sessions test for stage fright rather than, y'know, coding competency... "A technical interview has an uncanny resemblance to the Trier Social Stress Test, a procedure used for decades by psychologists and is the best known 'gold standard' procedure for the sole purpose of reliably inducing stress." As a consequence, whiteboard interviews may fail to assess coder competency. Rather, the researchers argue, they measure how well job candidates handle anxiety....

In essence, social anxiety took otherwise qualified job candidates out of the running because of the circumstances of the interview.

Comment Re:It's almost like a prophecy (Score 1) 74

Exactly.

As a citizen you are expected to know the law, because ignorance is no excuse. Meanwhile there are so many laws on the book it is impossible for any single person to know the law well enough to avoid breaking it not matter what they are doing. Adding insult to injury, the Police, Judges, and Prosecutors are not actually required to know or understand the laws they use to step on the citizens with. The police can arrest you for anything, including resisting arrest and get by with it. They are also allowed to lie in court and do so regularly. It is also codified into law that the police cannot be a friend to you in court, they are only allowed to be your enemy. This also goes for Prosecutors that fabricate incriminating evidence and withhold exculpatory evidence. They are allowed to pile on loads of bullshit charges as a fear tactic while judges, politicians, and people don't do shit about it. Judges regularly abuse their authority from the bench behind the bench, and away from the bench to rub elbows with power players and oppress the people they dislike that enter their court rooms.

The politicians regularly run on "tough on crime" platforms, and no matter how many regulations get on the books economic, environmental, and social disasters happen on the regular and almost with never anyone but a token scapegoat getting into any actual trouble as political dividing lines form where one side accuses and the other excuses. It's bullshit of the highest order and no one seems to give a shit as long as their side gets to win a little here and there as the little man is crushed under the laws largess.

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