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No Place to Hide

No Place to Hide

List Price: $26.00
Your Price: $17.16
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Timely Book For Troubled Times
Review:
No Place To Hide is a crucial and essential book to read for an eye opening factual account of data collection and privacy issues all Americans face. Mr. O'Harrow has written a book with meticulous attention to details, facts and reveals the main players involved with the collection of data of every aspect of daily American lives and how that data is being supplied to any government agency that cares to purchase it.

O'Harrow exposes the serious issue of private data technology companies and their marriage to government agencies, a marriage that is thriving while unchecked and ungoverned by guidelines or laws to protect every American's basic right to Privacy.

This book leads one to formulate the question "Is giving up my basic rights to privacy and living in a unrestricted, constantly growing complex of surveillance, data collection and selling of that data to any government agency going to make my life a more secure and safe one?

No Place To Hide is a concise and frighteningly revealing book that all Americans should read. O'Harrow arms us with an inside look at a growing partnership between private industry and government that needs to be controlled. A book that should remind all American's that we do have a voice in our Government and that we have serious Privacy and Civil Liberty issues at hand that we need to address as a nation.

E. Ray


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: People Should Read This Book First Before Leaving A Review
Review: It would most helpful and only correct if people would read this most revealing book BEFORE leaving a political commentary or review, which has nothing to do what so ever with the subject of this book. It is most misleading not to do so.

This book is not about Saddam at all, but rather about frightening privacy issues that are facing Americans post 9/11 under the guise of Security and Protection for the USA.

Really, do yourself a favor and read this well researched and most informative book. The author has more then done his homework. He has compiled thoroughly established facts in an understandable book that anyone, even those who DON"T take the time to read books before leaving reviews will find enlightening. This book is a most essential read for all Americans.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Thought Provoking, Mandatory Read!!!
Review: O'Harrow's book reads like a riveting spy novel. The stakes are high. How can America catch terrorists before they strike again? How can government help Americans feel safe in these uncertain times? The answer, according to powerful, self-styled, selfless techno-patriots is to buy their technology - lots of it - and records that have been amassed by commercial data brokers on every single American with details on the most intimate aspects of our lives ranging from where we live, where we bank, what we buy and how we like our sex - records that are often fraught with mistakes that finger innocents as criminals, deadbeats or worse.

It's a kind of science fiction nightmare where J. Edgar Hoover and Joseph McCarthy have been reincarnated into big business seeking to profit off the fears of the post 9/11 world - only it's real, it's revolting and the politicians and bureaucrats are often complicit. If the techno-patriots are going to save us from the next Mohamed Atta, who's going to save us from them? Can they really do it, or is it all smoke and mirrors in the name of profiteering? Are there alternatives that are better, faster, more cost effective, reliable and less intrusive? Sadly, these questions are the cliff hangers that go unanswered in O'Harrow's thought provoking book. There is no protagonist - only a bunch of characters - often seedy - who are out to convince America that you'll be safer if government can peek at your knickers on demand.

In a year where the U.S. will begin to implement Intelligence Reform legislation, the Patriot Act is up for review, and deficits are at all time highs to fight the war on terror, No Place to Hide is particularly timely. O'Harrow sets the table beautifully - it's up to every reader to decide whether America can stomach the meal being served. This is a mandatory read for policymakers and anyone who cares about what it means to live in America.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: not acurate
Review: This book tells the oft repeated propoganda idea tat everyone in america is being watched by 'big brother' since september 11th. Te eidence does not exist and this account is pure fear mongering. Not an acurate, but a very biased account.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Most people won't care
Review: This book won't make them care either -- it is very much preaching to the choir. Q: How could Saddam keep control of Iraq despite being a brutal dictator with only a few thousand loyal supporters? A: Because most Iraqis didn't care -- he only disappeared "those" people, you know, "those" people, criminal, dissidents, etc., not "regular" people like them who just went about their daily lives as usual. No dictator can survive without the support of the majority of his populance, and the majority of people prefer stability under a brutal dictator rather than uncertainty and change. Q: Why doesn't the average American care about the emerging surveillance society? A: Because the average complacent American knows that Big Brother has no interest in their pathetic pointless lives of masticating and defecating and fornicating and that such technology will only be used against "those" people, you know, "those" people, people who "aren't like us", criminals, dissidents, terrorists, dusky fellers who don't look like us or talk like us, you know, THOSE people.

Saddam killed over half a million Iraqis by the end because the average Iraqi didn't care that he was killing "those" people, indeed, usually celebrated that he was killing "those" people, the criminals, dissidents, and revolutionaries who would disrupt their pointless lives of masticating and defecating and fornicating. Sadly, the average American would similarly celebrate the killing of "those" people. The only difference between Iraqis celebrating the deaths of "those" people and Americans celebrating the deaths of "those" people is that we do not have a vicious brutal dictator like Saddam ruling us -- yet. It's unclear that this book is going to be enough to make sure that doesn't happen in the future.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: interesting but there's better out there
Review: This made for an interesting read, but there are other (many other) tech-spy books that are better.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: It Can Happen Here, and It Already Is Happening
Review: You've rented a car to drive from Connecticut to Virginia. You head south on I-95, but at times, your speed creeps up to 80 mph like many of the drivers around you. Finally, you stop to buy gas but your credit card is rejected at the pump. The reason? The company who rented you the car has been monitoring your driving in real time. Not only that, they've fined you three times, at $150 per violation, for speeding, and already deducted it from your credit card. Sound impossible? It's not, and Robert O'Harrow's NO PLACE TO HIDE describes how car rental companies can do it, and have already done it.

Perhaps you have never heard of Acxiom, Seisint, ChoicePoint, HNC Software, TransCore, Searchspace, and Verint? Well, that's just the way those companies want it. And they are just some of the companies who know all about you - your name, address, and social security number, every place you've ever lived, your credit histories, who your friends are, what you say and do on the Internet, where you travel, even your faces, fingerprints, and DNA. In the interest of catching terrorists and preventing terrorism, federal and local law enforcement agencies have increasingly turned to these companies for help - all conveniently situated outside the privacy laws and Patriot Act restrictions and free to collect virtually any information they can lay their hands on. The result is a boom in the "total information awareness" business that is creating a world of commercial "big brothers." It is a world about which most Americans are blissfully, and foolishly, unaware.

Faster machines, bigger databases, more networking, and microminiaturization to the level of flea-sized RFID chips and "smart dust" will only make these systems more and more pervasive. But as O'Harrow repeatedly demonstrates, mistakes get made and innocent people's lives are ruined without recourse. One of the strengths of NO PLACE TO HIDE is the author's retelling of nightmarish occurrences that victimized innocent American citizens, stories that resound with the eerie randomness and facelessness of Kafka's THE TRIAL. The author points out as well that system missions creep from anti-terrorism to criminal behavior to ... what? Furthermore, he demonstrates that these systems are so uncontrolled an open-ended in their use, law enforcement personnel can use them for any reason whatsoever, even for personal reasons or for personal gain. As O'Harrow quotes one sheriff's deputy from Michigan, "There isn't anybody, anywhere in law enforcement, that doesn't check people out. If they say they don't I'd stake you a hundred that they're lying."

NO PLACE TO HIDE is not without shortcomings that render it a 4-star rating rather than 5 stars. To begin with, O'Harrow's writing style is a bit tedious, employing more or less the same dramatic and illustrative devices in each chapter. As a result, the book feels longer and more repetitive than it really is. Second, by striving mightily to stay even-handed, the author creates an odd distance to subject matter that should be raising his hackles and creating a greater sense of outrage or dread. Third, the book is so full of little-known company names, products and services, and governmental agencies, they tend to blend into a sort of surveillance industry soup. A few well-conceived charts or diagrams would have been invaluable in sorting out the players. Finally, the book ends without so much as a word on what should be done to bring the post-9/11, Patriot Act-inspired information and surveillance crusade back under some semblance of citizen control.

Nevertheless, it's fair to say that O'Harrow's book is indeed a harrowing look into a 1984-ish, MINORITY REPORT future. Democrat or Republican, liberal or conservative, you're likely to find much to disturb you in this eye-opening book. NO PLACE TO HIDE outlines the framework for an America few of us would knowingly choose, evidence (if any more was needed) that Osama bin Laden's 9/11 plan succeeded far beyond anything he could possibly have dreamed. After all, could he ever have imagined being able to turn us so aggressively against ourselves? Or, to quote Ben Franklin in what is probably the best sentence in the book, "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserves neither liberty nor safety." When are we finally going to wake up from our 9/11 stupor and heed Mr. Franklin? Perhaps NO PLACE TO HIDE is the alarm we need.




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