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is free;
what's wrong with a little tracking? Because it's not just tracking. It's
tracking and storing. And it's an amount of data that, as we've
seen time and time again, can quickly begin to paint a compelling
picture of every customer.The implications are heavy. Im sure you heard
about the report last year of a man who called Target in
a rage because his 16-year-old daughter was suddenly being served up with
expectant-mother ads. He called the store back later to apologizeturned
out his daughter was pregnant. The store's algorithms for figuring out such
things had been spot on!The storage of the data means that, at
some point, someone can get to it. And as we recently read,
intelligence agencies in the U.S. and Britain have begun to do just
that for social-media sites. And when it comes to ad trackers, it's
not too hard to imagine an enterprising behind-the-scenes government initiative
to remove that anonymization.In fact, they can barely control their glee
about it. One of the PowerPoint slides recently released was headlined,
"Golden Nugget!"Imagine if the government passed a law that required all
U.S. citizens to carry around GPS tracking devices and complete records
of our buying and playing habits. That, I think you will agree,
would be a hard sell, and provoke widespread protests. So why are
we all essentially volunteering that information to companies and a government
that might not be trusted to use it carefully and legall
is a certain romanticism linked to armed warfare," Chouet said. Combine
conviction and romanticism and "you give yourself an image boost."Two of
the three young men on trial last week denied their goal was
jihad, and all three said their intention was to film war widows
and massacres of children. They bought much of their gear on sites
for hiking and fishing.Court testimony showed the three two
of whom live with their parents were squabbling before
their departure and their planning was erratic. One of the defendants, Fares
Farsi, 21 but 19 at the time, refused to go by land
because of possible car sickness."I don't see how I've been radicalized
..," as the charges claim, said another, Salah Eddine Gourmat, 24, in
a final statement to the court. "It's like you're talking to someone
from al-Qaida."The third defendant, Youssef Ettaoujar, 26, the only one
held in prison, worked to convince the court that his numerous vacations
in places like Mali and Syria were not aimed at making contacts
with jihadis, and that the name of his 2 1/2-year-old daughter, "Jihad,"
did not reflect his intentions.The prosecution is seeking three-to-six-year
sentences for the defendants. The verdict was set for March 7.The cases
including the death this month in Syria of a
30-year-old man from Toulouse has raised alarm bells in
French households. Two mothers, in Nice and Avignon in southern France,
whose children went missing have voiced fears the
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