So, wait, you're saying that saving the lives of individuals in terrorist organizations that aren't informants is a benefit? Or do you think that non-terrorists are safer now that terrorists can kill the informants revealing their identities to police and other security personnel?
Question just is if there are really so many terrorist organizations out there as they want to make us believe. And yes, i compare life with life. I simply have no concept of one human life being worth more than another one.
Nowdays i simply refuse to take any reports about people being terrorists at face value. The whole terrorist thing is abused to no end by now. It's the number one excuse for everything. People are put into constant fear, and after years of that fear they simply say "well, they say its terrorist, so be it, burn them!".
No joke: Our politicians here are so deep into that propaganda that they really go forward and tell us that if we see someone, or two or three, with luggage and/or a backpack, and they would approach a train station, it would be wise to call the authorities. They really tell us that, because these people want to hide their faces, if you see someone with a scarf in front of his face, and maybe even his jacket bulges out a bit, you better call the police. And that during winter time!
They tell us that if some people move into an appartement, and we don't see them during the day, but only in the evening, and if they speak a foreign language, and if they get visitors in the evening or night hours, we should be concerned and call the authorities.
Really, that's all just a big pile of crap by now.
Yes, knowing about a leak to everybody that will include those who endanger you is less dangerous than not knowing about a leak to only the specific people who endanger you. You seem to be making the assumption that with so many people having access to that information, it's bound to get leaked. Just because you have access to that information doesn't mean you also have intent or capability to leak that information, even if you knew which people to leak the information to in order to endanger anybody.
Espionage is a very old business. Stealing important information is something that can earn a lot of monies. Most people do not act because they are altruists. Most act for personal gain. People with access to such data do know how important it is, and how valuable it would be to others.
Yes, i have the strong assumption that data, to which many people have access, is bound to leak. And i am damn sure that it happens day in and day out. Just that the stuff that gets public on WL is a very, very small fraction of that. Most of such things never get out in the public.
If the information regarding the inviduals was on a secret network, classified properly, then they were protected as they should have been.
Obviously it was not as protected as it should have been, otherwise we would not have that data in the public now. Obviously too many people had access to it. Obviously it was collected in a way that if, lets say, someone gets access to a report from an informant, that informants real name and stuff was also in the same document.
This could have been avoided, or at least made harder to find out about.
So your answer is to make every organization not share any information with anybody who might be able to use it to connect various data?
That is the exact lack of information sharing that was blamed for 9/11.
No, that is not my answer. I have no idea how you came to that conclusion from what i have written.
My answer is that first and foremost: try hard to not make stupid things that can backfire badly. Do not shoot people just for fun and film it. Try to behave as honest as possible. The goal should be to have less stuff to be secretive about. The less of that you have, the less you have to fear a leak.
Then, the next thing is to not stupidly grab whatever data you can get hold of. Try not to force others to hand over their data to you. Collect only what you really, really need. Delete everything else. And from the stuff you do need, only make the absolute smallest amount that is needed accessible in networks where thousands, if not millions of people have access to.
And finally, from that little bit that is left, sort out the _really_ sensitive stuff, remove real names of important people and replace them with code names. And hand a list of the code-name <-> real-name relationship to only a very, very select few that need this information.
Doing all that will greatly reduce the risk of leaks. And if something leaks, it also reduces the risk of it being readily usable for everyone who gets access to the leak.
Unfortunately, the reality todays is as different as it can get. Every little piece of whatever information is collected and stored, readily accessible at any time. Even more data is demanded every day. They want to have all the bank transfer data, because, uhm, well, some bad dude could transfer a few bucks to some other bad dude. That's just stupid. First, find out who the allegedly bad dude is, and then store only the bank transfer data from that guy. Do not, never ever, just collect all the data from all transfers of all people just because there could be someone in there.
Really, all that terror-paranoia leads to nowhere good. Not from a social perspective, and surely not from a technological one.
Greetings,
Chris