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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Thursday, October 23, 2025

While a federal judge scrutinizes the constitutionality of tactics used by federal immigration authorities during ongoing protests in Chicago, these same agencies are quietly amassing behind-the-scenes surveillance technology.

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LISTEN: EFF's @MGuariglia.bsky.social joined @kalwradio.bsky.social's Your Call Radio to discuss ICE expanding its surveillance capabilities, recent legal decisions, and Trump's threats to send ICE to San Francisco. www.kalw.org/show/your-c ...

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-- Electronic Frontier Foundation (@eff.org) Oct 22, 2025 at 8:04 PM

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More: Backed by funding from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed in July, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has entered into contracts with companies to provide surveillance capabilities like facial recognition algorithms, an iris-scanning identification app, controversial spyware on smartphones, and a real-time smartphone location and social media tracking system. In September alone, ICE racked up $1.4 billion in new surveillance technology contracts, the highest in at least 18 years, according to The Washington Post.

These contracts are in addition to any privately owned surveillance networks to which ICE has access. Flock Safety, for example, has allowed ICE to access over 80,000 of its AI-powered license plate reader cameras installed nationwide, according to 404 Media. The expansive"and growing"mass surveillance camera network captures the license plate number, make, model, and any distinctive features of all passing vehicles, making it possible to track cars and, by extension, drivers, often without a warrant.

Although ICE has sold its surveillance campaign as necessary to locating and deporting undocumented immigrations, the Trump administration has signaled that the technologies will also be used on American citizens. In September, Trump signed an executive order designating antifa a domestic terrorist organization and signaled that federal agencies, including ICE, should devote resources to investigating the network. Todd M. Lyons, acting director of ICE, told Glenn Beck during an interview shortly after the executive order was signed that the agency would "track the money," "ringleaders," and "professional agitators" who are "being brought in" from outside the Chicago area to protest against immigration enforcement. But whether from Chicago or elsewhere, protester or "domestic terrorist," constitutional rights and limitations still apply, although adherence by federal agencies is being questioned.

Critics of mass surveillance have long warned that intrusive technologies could be used to violate Americans' privacy rights. "We don't know if law enforcement or ICE are getting search warrants to deploy this spyware," Maria Villegas Bravo, counsel for the Electronic Privacy Information Center, told the Post. "It's also a First Amendment issue because your phone contains all your communications, all your expressions ... it has your contact lists, it has your social media. Any political organizing people do," she continued, is "typically on social media now, or over the phone."

#1 | Posted by qcp at 2025-10-23 03:05 PM | Reply

Big Brother Keeps Us Safe.
--Republicans

#2 | Posted by snoofy at 2025-10-23 03:17 PM | Reply

When ICE thugs uncover a US citizen implicated in a crime through their warrantless surveillance, they will alert other federal, state, or the local police who will then reconstruct an investigation. I witnessed an example last century. A federal agency (XXX) was alerted to a gang trafficking in ZZZ, but the USG information seemed to have come without a wiretap warrant or there was a legal problem with how the info was obtained. This makes the information inadmissible in court. So XXX set up an impromptu "check point" and caught the suspects. The probable cause arrest warrant read something to the effect: "During a routine inspection of vehicles at the intersection of Atlantic Avenue and Smith Street, a known area for trafficking ZZZ, XXX agents noticed the suspects acted nervous and the driver made a furtive move, placing something under the seat of his car. A subsequent search of the vehicle then revealed...."

Slam dunk!

I changed the names and places, but you get the point.

#3 | Posted by C0RI0LANUS at 2025-10-23 03:37 PM | Reply

"If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face"forever."

"History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right."

"There will be no love, except the love of Big Brother."

Quotes from 1984

Fiction becomes reality.

He was only 40 years off.

#4 | Posted by donnerboy at 2025-10-23 03:37 PM | Reply

Isn't this like the third thread on the exact same topic?

#5 | Posted by sentinel at 2025-10-23 07:31 PM | Reply

And what does anyone imagine ICE will be doing once they're done building Trumps personal military?

#6 | Posted by Whatsleft at 2025-10-23 07:45 PM | Reply

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