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  <title>The Visible Man: An FBI Target Puts His Whole Life Online. - [::]  Ars Electronica - tribe.net</title>
  <link rel="alternate" href="http://arselectronica.tribe.net/thread/d9928eb1-5e50-4a5a-8565-4ee3a17efb32?format=atom" />
  <subtitle>Tribe.net. Local Connections</subtitle>
  <entry>
    <title>The Visible Man: An FBI Target Puts His Whole Life Online.</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://arselectronica.tribe.net/thread/d9928eb1-5e50-4a5a-8565-4ee3a17efb32#3ed7c91c-c6db-40a8-8918-5fb624b44a21" />
    <author>
      <name>e!7</name>
    </author>
    <id>http://arselectronica.tribe.net/thread/d9928eb1-5e50-4a5a-8565-4ee3a17efb32#3ed7c91c-c6db-40a8-8918-5fb624b44a21</id>
    <updated>2007-05-24T16:45:54Z</updated>
    <published>2007-05-24T16:45:54Z</published>
    <summary type="html">(thx to marc garrett for distributing this on NetBehaviour mailing list)&#xD;
&#xD;
The Visible Man: An FBI Target Puts His Whole Life Online.&#xD;
&#xD;
Hasan Elahi whips out his Samsung Pocket PC phone and shows me how he's&#xD;
keeping himself out of Guantanamo. He swivels the camera lens around and&#xD;
snaps a picture of the Manhattan Starbucks where we're drinking coffee.&#xD;
Then he squints and pecks at the phone's touchscreen. "OK! It's&#xD;
uploading now," says the cheery, 35-year-old artist and Rutgers&#xD;
professor, whose bleached-blond hair complements his fluorescent-green&#xD;
pants. "It'll go public in a few seconds." Sure enough, a moment later&#xD;
the shot appears on the front page of his Web site, TrackingTransience.net.&#xD;
&#xD;
There are already tons of pictures there. Elahi will post about a&#xD;
hundred today — the rooms he sat in, the food he ate, the coffees he&#xD;
ordered. Poke around his site and you'll find more than 20,000 images&#xD;
stretching back three years. Elahi has documented nearly every waking&#xD;
hour of his life during that time. He posts copies of every debit card&#xD;
transaction, so you can see what he bought, where, and when. A GPS&#xD;
device in his pocket reports his real-time physical location on a map.&#xD;
&#xD;
Elahi's site is the perfect alibi. Or an audacious art project. Or both.&#xD;
The Bangladeshi-born American says the US government mistakenly listed&#xD;
him on its terrorist watch list — and once you're on, it's hard to get&#xD;
off. To convince the Feds of his innocence, Elahi has made his life an&#xD;
open book. Whenever they want, officials can go to his site and see&#xD;
where he is and what he's doing. Indeed, his server logs show hits from&#xD;
the Pentagon, the Secretary of Defense, and the Executive Office of the&#xD;
President, among others.&#xD;
&#xD;
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/people/magazine/15-06/ps_transparency</summary>
    <dc:creator>e!7</dc:creator>
    <dc:date>2007-05-24T16:45:54Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
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