FDA: An Argument for Pervasive Monitoring

March 12, 2009

Lost amidst the noise about Apple netbooks and communication functions in Google services was this write up in Natural News: “FDA Scientists Accuse Agency of Corruption, Intimidation”. You can read the story here. When I reviewed the article, I was not concerned about who shot John. The point for me was that the information flowing into, around, and out of a US government entity seemed to be subjective to an extraordinary amount of massaging and filtering. I can understand the need for these actions in police and intelligence areas. I am a little puzzled about the same effort or lack of effort applied in areas where public health may be an issue. Read the story. Make up your own mind. My thoughts were after thinking about David Gutierrez’s write up were:

  1. Pervasive monitoring may make it easier to identify anomalies or unusual information activities
  2. A single search system would make it easier for authorized users to pinpoint topics and anomalies
  3. A standard for US government information objects would be helpful.

The article has a somewhat troublesome series of assertions about the agency in question. Maybe the equivalent of traffic cameras are needed to police some agencies? I don’t have a solid opinion yet. Just a concern.

Stephen Arnold, March 12, 2009

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