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    Home»Economy»Surveillance For Sale – FBI Increases Data Tracking
    Economy

    Surveillance For Sale – FBI Increases Data Tracking

    March 20, 20263 Mins Read
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    The FBI has now openly admitted that it is purchasing location data on Americans, confirming what many suspected for years. Director Kash Patel testified that the agency “does purchase commercially available information” and uses “all tools” to carry out its mission, which includes data capable of tracking people’s movements without a warrant.

    This is being framed as a legal technicality, but that misses the entire point. The Constitution requires a warrant to obtain this type of information directly from telecom companies, yet by purchasing the same data from private brokers, the government simply bypasses that requirement. Lawmakers have already called this an “outrageous end-run around the Fourth Amendment,” and that is exactly what it is.

    What we are witnessing is not new. Governments throughout history always expand surveillance when they begin to lose confidence domestically. The key detail here is not that the FBI is collecting data. It is how the data is being obtained. This information is sourced from the private sector through a multibillion-dollar data broker industry that aggregates location data from everyday phone apps, advertising systems, and digital platforms. The government is not hacking phones. It is simply buying what corporations already collect. That is what creates the legal gray area.

    Data has become a commodity. Once something becomes a commodity, it can be bought and sold. Governments, like any other participant, will purchase what they need if the law allows it. The problem is that the law has not kept pace with technology, leaving a gap large enough to drive surveillance through.

    This also ties directly into what I have warned about for years regarding financial surveillance. Governments began by monitoring bank accounts, tracking transactions, and implementing reporting requirements under the justification of preventing crime. That expanded steadily. Now we are moving into full behavioral tracking through digital data. The progression is always incremental, never abrupt.

    The involvement of artificial intelligence makes this far more significant. Lawmakers have already warned that the ability to analyze “massive amounts of private information” changes the nature of surveillance entirely. It is no longer about targeting individuals. It becomes about pattern recognition across entire populations. That is a very different level of control.

    The argument that the data is “commercially available” is also misleading. Just because something can be purchased does not mean it should be used without restriction by the state. The Constitution was designed to limit government power, not to be circumvented by market transactions.

    The issue is that the legal framework itself is outdated and being used to justify practices that would have been considered unconstitutional in a previous era. This is how systems evolve. Technology advances, laws lag, and governments exploit the gap. By the time the public recognizes what has happened, the infrastructure is already in place.

    From a confidence perspective, this is a warning sign. When governments begin to rely more on surveillance than on economic growth and stability, it reflects a shift away from maintaining confidence through prosperity and toward maintaining control through information.



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