The data throws new light on the department’s surveillance ambitions in the wake of the agency’s unprecedented $165bn funding boost in last year’s tax and spending bill, and controversies over agents’ apparent gathering of visual and biometric data on protesters in Minneapolis.
Hacked data shines light on homeland security’s AI surveillance ambitions
Submitted 3 weeks ago by throws_lemy@lemmy.nz to technology@lemmy.world
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/15/hacked-data-homeland-security
mrnobody@reddthat.com 3 weeks ago
No time like the present to get of all social media and big tech!!! Then request your data be deleted!
zo0@programming.dev 3 weeks ago
Does it actually get deleted? I have seen too many cases of ‘Somehow deleted data has returned’ to believe that request does anything.
mrnobody@reddthat.com 3 weeks ago
well, they tell you they hold data for up to 7 years for legal reasons, but I deleted this stuff about 10+ years ago.
Unfortunately, Facebook build data profiles for non users too, so they can continue tracking based on crappy face detection or people being tagged in photos. I don’t really know if it’s even worth trying to sue, because they could “accidentally acquire” info about you from data brokers when they buy in bulk.
However, it never hurts to minimize what they have access to!
4am@lemmy.zip 3 weeks ago
There am no way they’d ever actually delete it unless there were actual consequences, and there aren’t , even when the law is followed.
boatswain@infosec.pub 3 weeks ago
One place I’m familiar with actually just deidentifies data when they say they delete it. They also have ways to re-identify if needed.