
1A 'If You Can Keep It': Privacy Protections Under The Trump Administration
Mar 30, 2026
Jake LaPerrucca, privacy lawyer focused on surveillance policy, and Lauren Harper, government secrecy and transparency advocate, discuss widening agency data sharing and risks from centralized government databases. They cover big data tools, private vendors enabling federal access, FISA 702 and broker loopholes, chilling effects on civil liberties, and oversight gaps that make surveillance hard to unwind.
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Privacy Act Purpose Specification Is A Firewall
- The Privacy Act of 1974 enshrined purpose specification so agencies must limit data use to its original purpose, preventing cross-agency rummaging.
- Lauren Harper warns removing silos erodes that firewall and increases breach impact by creating single points of failure.
AI And Analytics Turn Scattered Data Into Dossiers
- Modern big-data tools and AI make it trivial to stitch disparate datasets into detailed profiles at scale, unlike past eras.
- Jake LaPerrucca and hosts point to Palantir and Flock as private firms that aggregate and analyze location and surveillance data for agencies.
Flock License Plate Network Enabled Federal Access
- Flock runs a private license-plate reader network and has been reported to enable federal access via local agency opt-ins.
- Lauren Harper cites University of Washington research showing at least eight Washington agencies allowed one-to-one federal access and CBP has plate access.
