Fusion Centers Highlight Privacy Versus Security Issue
By Mike Shultz, Infoglide Software CEO
It’s been quite awhile since we’ve addressed the challenge of balancing security and privacy. As authors of the software used more times every day than all other identity resolution software combined (video: Who Is Infoglide Software?), we are extremely conscious of how critical it is to strike a balance every day that ensures the security and protects the privacy of U.S. citizens.
As fusion centers proliferate, the tension between those who protect us from physical harm and those who protect our right to privacy plays out in public meetings. In Austin, for example, every meeting about the new Austin Regional Intelligence Center is well attended by law enforcement agencies who are challenged daily to keep citizens safe and by groups like the ACLU who point out the dangers of invading the privacy of citizens that fusion centers are meant to protect.
Although fusion centers highlight the privacy/security clash in a public way, any use of powerful identity resolution technology to catch people with bad intent must be weighed against the rights to privacy and confidentiality that we all enjoy. In every instance that the technology is applied – detecting money laundering, solving lottery ticket theft, monitoring retail merchandise exchange, uncovering workers’ comp employer cheating, and other uses – care must be taken to apply it judiciously and only in ways needed to achieve narrow objectives while always protecting individual liberties.
I have always believed that the back and forth between all of the stakeholders is healthy for our society and I continue to believe that today. At Infoglide Software we are proud to be the “Gold Standard” for entity and identity resolution software and we are mindful of the balance that is required in the application of our technology.
