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Cory Doctorow's "Scroogled" read by Wil Wheaton

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    Wheaton: Scroogled by Cory Doctorow. Originally published in Radar Magazine, September, 2007.
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    Read by Will Wheaton.
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    "Give me six lines written by the most honorable of men, and I will find an excuse in them to hang him."
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    Cardinal Richelieu
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    Greg landed at SFO at 8PM, but by the time he made it to the front of the customs line it was after midnight.
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    He had it good -- he'd been in first class, first off the plane,
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    brown as a nut and loose-limbed after a month on the beach at Cabo,
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    SCUBA diving three days a week, bumming around and flirting with French college girls the rest of the time.
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    When he'd left San Francisco a month before, he'd been a stoop-shouldered, pot-bellied wreck --
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    now he was a bronze god, drawing appreciative looks from the stews at the front of the plane.
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    In the four hours he spent in the customs line, he fell from god back to man.
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    His warm buzz wore off, the sweat ran down the crack of his ass,
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    and his shoulders and neck grew so tense that his upper back felt like a tennis racket.
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    The batteries on his iPod died after the third hour, leaving him with nothing to do
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    except eavesdrop on the middle-aged couple ahead of him.
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    "They've starting googling us at the border," she said. "I told you they'd do it."
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    "I thought that didn't start until next month?"
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    The man had brought a huge sombrero on board, carefully stowing it in its own overhead locker,
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    and now he was stuck alternately wearing it and holding it.
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    Googling at the border. Christ. Greg vested out from Google six months before, cashing in his options
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    and "taking some me time," which turned out to be harder than he expected.
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    Five months later, what he'd mostly done is fix his friends' PCs and websites, and watch daytime TV,
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    and gain ten pounds, which he blamed on being at home,
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    instead of in the Googleplex, with its excellent 24-hour gym.
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    The writing had been on the wall.
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    Google had a whole pod of lawyers in charge of dealing with the world's governments,
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    and scumbag lobbyists on the Hill to try to keep the law from turning them into the world's best snitch.
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    It was a losing battle.
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    The Government had spent $15 billion on a program to fingerprint and photograph visitors at the border,
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    and hadn't caught a single terrorist.
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    Clearly, the public sector was not equipped to Do Search Right.
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    The DHS officers had bags under their eyes
    as they squinted at their screens,
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    prodding mistrustfully at their keyboards with sausage fingers.
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    No wonder it was taking four hours to get out of the goddamned airport.
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    "Evening," he said, as he handed the man his sweaty passport.
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    The man grunted and swiped it, then stared at his screen, clicking. A lot.
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    He had a little bit of dried food in the corner of his mouth
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    and his tongue crept out and licked at it as he concentrated.
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    "Want to tell me about June, 1998?"
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    Greg turned, rotated his head this way and that. "I'm sorry?"
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    "You posted a message to alt.burningman on June 17, 1998 about your plan to attend Burning Man.
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    You posted, 'Would taking shrooms be a really bad idea?'"
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    It was 3AM before they let him out of the "secondary screening" room.
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    The interrogator was an older man, so skinny he looked like he'd been carved out of wood
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    His questions went a lot further than the Burning Man shrooms.
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    They were just the start of Greg's problems.
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    "I'd like to know more about your hobbies. Are you interested in model rocketry?"
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    "What?"
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    "Model rocketry."
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    "No," Greg said. "No, I'm not."
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    Thinking of all the explosives that model rocketry people surrounded themselves with.
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    The man made a note, clicked some more.
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    "You see, I ask because I see a heavy spike of ads for model rocketry supplies
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    showing up alongside your search results and Google mail."
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    Greg felt his guts spasm. "You're looking at my searches and email?"
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    He hadn't touched a keyboard in a month,
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    but he knew that what you put into the searchbar was more intimate than what you told your father-confessor.
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    He'd seen enough queries to know that.
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    "Calm down, please. No, I'm not looking at your searches."
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    The man made a bitter lemon face and went on in a squeaky voice.
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    "That would be unconstitutional. You weren't listening to me.
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    We see the ads that show up when you read your mail and do your searching.
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    I have a brochure explaining it, I'll give it to you when we're through here."
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    "But the ads don't mean anything -- I get ads for Ann Coulter ringtones
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    whenever I get email from my friend who lives in Coulter, Iowa!"
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    The man nodded. "I understand, sir. And that's just why I'm here talking to you, instead of just looking at this screen.
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    Why do you suppose model rocket ads show up so frequently for you?"
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    He thought for a moment.
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    "OK, just do this. Go to Google and search for 'coffee fanciers', all right?"
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    He'd been very active in the group, helping them build out the site for their coffee-of-the-month subscription service.
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    The blend they were going to launch with was called "Jet Fuel." "Jet Fuel" and "Launch"
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    -- that'd probably make Google barf up model rocket ads.
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    Not that he would know -- he blocked all the ads in his browser.
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    They were in the home stretch when the carved man found the Hallowe'en photos.
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    They were buried three screens deep in the search results for "Greg Lupinski," and Greg hadn't noticed them.
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    "It was a Gulf War themed party," he said. "In the Castro."
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    "And you're dressed as --?"
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    "A suicide bomber."
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    Just saying the words in an airport made him nervous,
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    as though uttering them would cause the handcuffs to come out.
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    "Come with me, Mr Lupinski."
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    The search lasted a long time. They swabbed him in places he didn't know he had.
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    He asked about a lawyer.
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    They told him that he could call all the lawyers he wanted once he was out of the Customs sterile area.
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    "Good night, Mr Lupinski."
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    This was a new interrogator, a man who'd wanted to know about
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    the reason that he'd sought both night diving and deep diving specialist certification from the PADI instructor in Cabo.
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    The guy impliedthat Greg had been training to be an al-Qaeda frogman,
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    and didn't seem to believe that Greg had just wanted to do all the certifications he could,
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    pursuing diving the way he pursued everything: thoroughly.
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    But now the man with the frogman fantasy was bidding him a good night and releasing him from the secondary screening area.
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    His suitcases stood alone by the baggage carousel.
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    When he picked them up, he saw that they had been opened and then inexpertly closed.
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    Some of his clothes stuck out from around the edges.
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    At home, he saw that all the fake "pre-Colombian" statues had been broken,
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    and that his white cotton Mexican shirt -- folded and fresh from his laundry-lady -- had a boot-print in the middle of it.
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    His clothes no longer smelled of Mexico. Now they smelled of airports and machine oil.
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    The mailman had dropped an entire milk-crate of mail off at his place that day, but he couldn't even begin to confront it.
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    All he could think of, as the sun rose over the Mission, turning the Victorian houses they called "painted ladies" vivid colors,
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    was what it meant to be googled.
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    He wasn't going to sleep. No way. He needed to talk about this.
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    And there was only one person who he could talk to, and luckily, she was usually awake around now.
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    Maya had started at Google two years after him, but had gotten a much bigger grant of stock than he had.
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    She knew exactly what she was going to do with it, too, once she vested:
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    take her dogs and her girlfriend and head to Florence, for good.
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    Learn Italian, take in the museums, sit in the cafes.
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    It was she who'd convinced him to go to Mexico: anywhere, she said, anywhere that he could reboot his existence.
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    Maya had two giant chocolate Labs and a very, very patient girlfriend who'd put up with anything
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    except being dragged around Dolores Park at 6AM by 350 pounds of drooling brown canine
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    She went for her Mace as he jogged towards her, then did a double-take and threw her arms open,
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    dropping the leashes and stamping on them with one sneaker, a practiced gesture.
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    "Where's the rest of you? Dude, you look hawt!"
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    He took the hug, suddenly self-conscious of the way he smelled after a night of invasive googling.
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    "Maya," he said. "Maya, what do you know about the DHS?"
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    She stiffened and the dogs whined. She looked around, then nodded up at the tennis courts.
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    "Top of the light standard there, don't look, there. That's one of our muni WiFi access points.
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    Wide-angle webcam. Face away from it when you talk. Lip-readers."
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    He parsed this out slowly. Google's free municipal WiFi program was a hit in every city where it played,
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    and in the grand scheme of things, it hadn't cost much to put WiFi access points up on light standards and other power-ready poles around town.
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    Especially not when measured against the ability to serve ads to people based on where they were sitting.
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    He hadn't paid much attention when they'd made the webcams on all those access points public
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    -- there'd been a day's worth of blogstorm while people looked out over their childhood streets
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    or patrolled prostitution strolls, fingering johns, but it had blown over.
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    Now he felt -- watched.
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    Feeling silly, he kept his lips together and
    mumbled, "You're joking."
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    "Come with me," she said, facing squarely
    away from the pole.
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    The dogs weren't happy about having their walks cut short,
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    and they let it be known in the kitchen as Maya fixed coffee for them -- barking, banging into the table and rocking it.
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    Maya's girlfriend Laurie called out from the bedroom and Maya went back to talk to her, then emerged, looking flustered.
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    "It started with China," she said.
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    "Once we moved our servers onto the mainland, they went under Chinese jurisdiction.
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    They could google everyone going through our servers."
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    Greg knew what that meant:
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    if you visited a page with Google ads on it, if you used Google maps, if you used Google mail -- even if you sent mail to a gmail account --
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    Google was collecting your info, forever.
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    "They were using us to build profiles of people. Not arresting them, you understand.
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    But when they had someone they wanted to arrest, they'd come to us for a profile and find a reason to bust them.
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    There's hardly anything you can do on the net that isn't illegal in China."
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    Greg shook his head. "Why did they put the servers in China?"
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    "The government said they'd block them if they didn't. And Yahoo was there."
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    They both made a face.
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    Somewhere along the way, Google had become obsessed with Yahoo,
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    more worried about what the competition was doing than how they were performing.
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    "So we did it. But a lot of us didn't like the idea."
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    She sipped her coffee and lowered her voice. One of the dogs whined.
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    "I made it my 20 percent project."
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    Googlers were supposed to devote 20 percent of their time to blue-sky projects.
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    "Me and my pod. We call it the googlecleaner.
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    It goes deep into the database and statistically normalizes you.
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    Your searches, your gmail histograms, your browsing patterns. All of it."
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    "The search ads?"
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    "Ah," she grimaced. "Yes, the DHS. So we brokered a compromise with the DHS.
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    They'd stop asking to go fishing in our search records and we'd let them see what ads got displayed for you."
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    Greg felt sick. "Why? Don't tell me Yahoo was doing it already --"
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    "No, no. Well, yes. Sure. Yahoo was already doing it. But that wasn't it. You know, Republicans hate Google.
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    We are overwhelmingly registered Democrat.
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    So we're doing what we can to make peace with them before they clobber us.
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    This isn't PII --" Personally Identifying Information, the toxic smog of the information age "-- it's just metadata.
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    So it's only slightly evil."
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    "If it's all so innocuous, why all this cloak-and-dagger stuff?"
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    She sighed and hugged the dog that was butting her with his huge, anvil-shaped head.
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    "The spooks are like pubic lice. They get everywhere.
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    Once we let them in, everything suddenly got a lot more -- secret.
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    Some of our meetings have to have spooks present,
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    it's like being in some Soviet ministry, with a political officer always there, watching everything.
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    And the security clearance. Now we're divided into these camps: the cleared and the suspect.
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    We all know who isn't cleared, but no one knows why.
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    I'm cleared. Lucky me -- being a homo no longer disqualifies you for access to seekrit crap
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    No cleared person wants to even eat lunch with an un-clearable.
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    Every now and again, one of your teammates will get pulled off your project 'for security reasons', whatever that means."
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    Greg felt very tired. "So now I'm feeling lucky I got out of the airport alive.
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    I suppose I might have ended up in Gitmo if it had gone badly, huh?"
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    She was staring at him intently, her eyes flicking from side to side.
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    He waited, but she didn't say anything.
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    "What?"
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    "What I'm about to tell you, you can't ever repeat it, OK?"
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    "Um, OK? You're not going to tell me you're a deep-cover Al-Quaeda suicide bomber?"
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    "Nothing so simple. Here's the thing: the airport DHS scrutiny is a gating function.
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    It lets the spooks narrow down their search criteria.
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    Once you get pulled aside for secondary at the border, you become a 'person of interest,' and they never, ever let up.
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    They'll check the webcams for your face and gait. Read your mail. Log your searches."
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    "I thought you said the courts wouldn't let them --"
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    "The courts won't let them indiscriminately google you.
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    But once you get into the system, it becomes a selective search. All legal.
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    And once they start googling you, they always find something."
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    "You mean to say they've got a boiler-room of midwestern housewives reading the email of everyone who ever got a second look at the border?
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    That sounds like the world's shittiest job."
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    "If only. No, this is all untouched by human hands.
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    All your data is fed into a big hopper that checks for 'suspicious patterns' and gradually builds the case against you,
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    using deviation from statistical norms to prove that you're guilty of something.
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    It's just a variation of the way we spot search-spammers"
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    -- the "optimizers" who tried to get their Viagra scams and Ponzi schemes to come to the top of the search results "
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    -- but instead of lowering your search rank, we increase your probability of being sent to Syria.
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    And of course, they google all of us, everyone
    who works on anything 'sensitive.'"
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    "Naturally," Greg said. He felt like he was going to throw up. He felt like never using a search engine again.
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    "How the hell did this happen? It's such a good place. 'Don't be evil,' right?"
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    That was the corporate motto, and for Greg, it had been a huge part of his reason
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    for taking his fresh-minted computer science PhD from Stanford directly to Google.
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    Maya's laugh was bitter and cynical. "Don't be evil? Come on, Greg.
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    Don't you remember what it was like when we started censoring the Chinese search results,
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    and we all asked how that could be anything but evil?
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    The company line was hilarious: 'We're not doing evil -- we're giving them access to a better search tool!
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    If we showed them search results they couldn't get to, that would just frustrate them.
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    It would be a bad user experience.
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    If we hadn't lost our don't-be-evil cherry by then, we surely did the day we took that one."
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    "Now what?" Greg pushed a dog away from him and Maya looked hurt.
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    "Now you're a person of interest, Greg. Googlestalked.
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    Now, you live your life with someone watching over your shoulder, all the time.
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    You know the mission statement, right? 'Organize all human knowledge.' That's everything.
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    Give it five years, we'll know how many turds were in the bowl before you flushed.
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    Combine that with automated suspicion of anyone who matches a statistical picture of a bad guy and you're --"
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    "I'm scroogled."
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    "Totally."
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    "Thanks, Maya," he said. "Thanks anyway."
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    "Sit down," she said. The dog that had been bumping at his legs was at it again.
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    Maya took both dogs down the hall to the bedroom and he heard her muffled argument with her girlfriend.
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    She came back without the dogs.
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    "I can fix this," she said in a whisper so low it was practically a hiss.
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    "I can googleclean you."
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    "But you're under constant scrutiny --"
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    "By DHS agents.
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    Once they fired all non-native-born Americans from the DHS, it got a lot fatter and stupider.
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    I can googleclean you, Greg."
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    "I don't want you to get into trouble."
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    She shook her head. "I'm already doomed. I built the googlecleaner.
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    Every day since then has been borrowed time
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    -- now it's just a matter of waiting for someone to point out my expertise and history to the DHS
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    and, oh, I don't know.
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    Whatever it is they do to people like me in the War on Abstract Nouns."
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    Greg remembered the questioning at the airport. The search. His shirt, the bootprint in the middle of it.
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    "Do it," he said.
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    The ads were weird. He hadn't really paid attention to them in years.
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    The blocker got rid of most of them, but Google changed its code often enough that their little text ads showed up on a lot of his pages.
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    They stayed subliminal mostly -- only clunkers like that Ann Coulter ringtone ad made it past his eyes into his brain.
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    Now the clunkers were everywhere: Intelligent Design Facts, Online Seminary Degree,
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    Terror Free Tomorrow, Porn Blocker Software, Homosexuality and Satan.
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    He clicked through a couple of these and found himself in some kind of alternate universe Internet,
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    full of weird opinions about the evils of being gay, the certainty of the young Earth,
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    the need for eternal national vigilance.
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    Then he started to notice something weird about the search results themselves.
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    After unpacking his suitcase and opening his mail, he spent two weeks sitting at home on his ass, surfing,
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    His pre-Mexico belly was reemerging, so he decided to do something about it.
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    No burritos for lunch today -- he'd go to that holistic place Maya had told him about.
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    Vegan low-fat cuisine couldn't possibly be as gross as it sounded.
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    "Did you mean 'Hungarian Restaurants'?"
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    He snorted. No, he'd meant "holistic restaurants," you dumbass search-engine. It nagged at him.
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    He pulled up his search history and went back through the results, printing out the pages.
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    Then he logged out of his Google account and went back through the same searches,
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    comparing the results to the logged-in pages. The differences were striking.
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    A search for "democratic primary" pointed to anti-Hillary rants on angry blogs when he was logged in,
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    and to information on volunteering for the DNC when he was logged out.
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    Searching for "abortion clinic" while logged out listed the nearest Planned Parenthood office;
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    searching while logged in gave him information about Campaign Life, ProLife.com, and the ProLife alliance.
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    This was Maya's googlecleaner at work.
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    It was like the stories of people who asked their TiVos to record an episode of "Queer Eye"
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    and then got inundated with suggestions for other "gay shows"
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    -- "My TiVo thinks I'm gay,"was the title of one article he remembered.
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    Google had been experimenting with "personalized" search results before he left the country
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    -- here it was, in all its glory.
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    Google thought he was a conservative Christian Republican
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    who supported the War on Terror and many other abstract nouns.
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    He logged out of Google -- that was simple. Five minutes later, he logged in again.
  • 20:21 - 20:26
    His entire address book was in there. He logged out again. Logged back in.
  • 20:26 - 20:29
    His calendar -- when was his parents' anniversary again?
  • 20:30 - 20:32
    Logged out. Logged back in.
  • 20:32 - 20:35
    Needed his bookmarked locations in Maps. Logged out.
  • 20:35 - 20:39
    He stopped trying. Google was where his friendships lived
  • 20:39 - 20:43
    -- all those people he stayed connected to on Orkut. It was where his relationships lived:
  • 20:43 - 20:47
    all that archived email, all those addresses in his address-book.
  • 20:47 - 20:50
    It was his family photos, his bookmarks.
  • 20:50 - 20:55
    Hell, his search history -- his real search history -- was like an outboard brain,
  • 20:55 - 20:59
    remembering which parts of the unplumbable Internet he cared about,
  • 20:59 - 21:03
    so that he didn't have to remember it the hard way, with the meat in his skull.
  • 21:03 - 21:09
    Google had a copy of him -- all the parts of him that navigated the world and the people in it.
  • 21:09 - 21:14
    Google owned that copy, and without it, he couldn't be himself anymore.
  • 21:14 - 21:16
    He'd just have to stay logged in.
  • 21:16 - 21:21
    Greg mashed the keys on the laptop next to his bed, bringing the screen to life.
  • 21:21 - 21:28
    He squinted at the toolbar clock: 4:13AM! Christ, who was pounding on his door at this hour?
  • 21:28 - 21:32
    He shouted "Coming!" in a muzzy voice and pulled on a robe and slippers.
  • 21:32 - 21:36
    He shuffled down the hallway, turning on lights as he
    went, squinting.
  • 21:36 - 21:41
    At the door, he squinted through the peephole, peering at -- Maya.
  • 21:41 - 21:45
    He undid the chains and the deadbolt and yanked the door open and Maya rushed in past him,
  • 21:45 - 21:50
    followed by the dogs, followed by her girlfriend, Laurie, whom he'd last seen at a Christmas party at Google,
  • 21:50 - 21:53
    in a fabulous cocktail dress and an elaborate up-do.
  • 21:53 - 21:57
    Now she was wearing a freebie Google Summer of Code sweatshirt, jeans,
  • 21:57 - 22:02
    and a frown that started between her eyebrows and intensified all the way down her face.
  • 22:02 - 22:05
    Maya was sheened with sweat, her hair sticking to her forehead.
  • 22:05 - 22:08
    She scrubbed at her eyes, which were red and lined.
  • 22:09 - 22:11
    "Pack a bag," she said, in a hoarse croak.
  • 22:11 - 22:12
    "What?"
  • 22:12 - 22:15
    "Whatever you can't live without. A couple changes of clothes.
  • 22:15 - 22:19
    Anything you're sentimental about -- shoebox of pictures, your grandfather's razor, whatever.
  • 22:19 - 22:22
    But keep it small, something you can carry. We're traveling light."
  • 22:23 - 22:24
    "Maya, what are you --"
  • 22:24 - 22:29
    She took him by the shoulders. "Do. It," she said. "Don't ask questions right now. There's no time."
  • 22:30 - 22:31
    "Where do you want to --"
  • 22:31 - 22:34
    "Mexico, probably. Don't know yet. Pack, dammit."
  • 22:34 - 22:38
    She pushed past him into his bedroom and started yanking open drawers.
  • 22:38 - 22:43
    "Maya," he said, sharply, "I'm not going anywhere until you tell me what's going on."
  • 22:43 - 22:46
    She glared at him and pushed her hair away from her face.
  • 22:46 - 22:50
    "The googlecleaner lives. I shut it down, walked away from it, after I did you.
  • 22:50 - 22:52
    It was too dangerous to use anymore.
  • 22:52 - 22:55
    But I still get buginizer notifications when new bugs get filed against it,
  • 22:55 - 22:57
    I'm still in B as the project's owner.
  • 22:57 - 23:01
    Someone filed eight bugs against it this week.
  • 23:01 - 23:06
    Someone's used it six times to smear six very specific accounts."
  • 23:06 - 23:07
    "Who's using it?"
  • 23:07 - 23:11
    "Well, I'll give you a hint. Let me tell you who's been cleaned this week --"
  • 23:11 - 23:17
    She listed six candidates, four Republican and two Democrat, who were all in the running for the primaries.
  • 23:18 - 23:20
    "Googlers are blackwashing political candidates?"
  • 23:21 - 23:26
    "Not Googlers. This is all coming from offsite. The IP block is registered in DC.
  • 23:26 - 23:31
    And the IPs are all also used by Gmail users. And those Gmail users --"
  • 23:31 - 23:33
    "You spied on gmail accounts?"
  • 23:33 - 23:35
    "I'm leaving in two minutes, with or without you.
  • 23:35 - 23:37
    You can interrupt me to ask me questions, or you can listen."
  • 23:38 - 23:39
    She gave him another look.
  • 23:39 - 23:44
    Laurie stood in the door of the bedroom, holding the dogs by the collars and looking down at the floor.
  • 23:45 - 23:48
    "Good. OK. Yes. I did spy on their email. Of course I did.
  • 23:48 - 23:52
    Everyone does it, now and again, and for a lot worse reasons that this.
  • 23:52 - 23:57
    "It's our lobbying firm. The ones who invented the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. Remember them?
  • 23:57 - 24:02
    It was a stink when we hired them, but Google couldn't afford to be 'that company full of registered Democrats' forever.
  • 24:02 - 24:06
    We needed friends in Congress. These guys could do it for us."
  • 24:06 - 24:09
    "But they're ruining politicians' careers!"
  • 24:09 - 24:12
    "Yeah. They certainly are. And who benefits when they do that?"
  • 24:12 - 24:15
    Laurie spoke, at last. "Other politicians."
  • 24:15 - 24:19
    He felt his pulse beating in his temples. "We should tell someone."
  • 24:19 - 24:23
    "Yeah," Maya said. "How? They know everything about us.
  • 24:23 - 24:28
    They can see every search. Every email. Every time we've been caught on the webcams.
  • 24:28 - 24:31
    Who is in our social network -- you know that if you've got more than fifteen Orkut buddies,
  • 24:31 - 24:37
    it's statistically certain that you're no more than three steps to someone who's contributed money to a 'terrorist' cause?
  • 24:38 - 24:41
    Remember the airport? Imagine a lot more of that."
  • 24:42 - 24:48
    "Maya," he said, carefully. "I think you're over-reacting. You don't need to go to Mexico.
  • 24:48 - 24:51
    You can just quit. We can do a startup together or something.
  • 24:51 - 24:56
    Or you can move to the country and raise dogs. Whatever. This is crazy --"
  • 24:57 - 25:01
    "They came to see me today," she said. "At work. Two of the political officers
  • 25:01 - 25:06
    -- the minders who monitor our sensitive projects. And they asked me a lot of very heavy questions."
  • 25:06 - 25:08
    "About the googlecleaner?"
  • 25:08 - 25:12
    "About my friends and family. About my search history. About my political beliefs."
  • 25:13 - 25:14
    "Jesus."
  • 25:14 - 25:18
    "They were sending me a message. They were letting me know that they were onto me.
  • 25:18 - 25:22
    They're watching every click and every search. It's time to go -- time to get out of range."
  • 25:23 - 25:25
    "There's a Google office in Mexico, you know."
  • 25:25 - 25:27
    "Are you coming, Greg? We're going now."
  • 25:29 - 25:31
    "Laurie, what do you think of this?"
  • 25:32 - 25:38
    Laurie thumped the dogs between the shoulders. "Maya showed me what Google knows about me.
  • 25:38 - 25:44
    It's like there's a little me in there, a copy of me. Like I'm pinned down under a jar with a ball of ether.
  • 25:45 - 25:50
    My parents left East Germany in '65 -- they used to tell me about the Stasi.
  • 25:50 - 25:54
    They'd put everything about you in your file -- even unpatriotic jokes.
  • 25:55 - 26:01
    Lately I've been feeling...watched. All the time. Like I can't live without leaving a trail.
  • 26:01 - 26:05
    Like I'm throwing off a smog of data and it can't be gotten rid of."
  • 26:06 - 26:09
    "We're going now, Greg. Now. Are you coming?"
  • 26:10 - 26:14
    Greg looked at the dogs. "I've got some pesos left over," he said.
  • 26:14 - 26:16
    "You take them. Be careful, OK?"
  • 26:17 - 26:19
    She looked like she was going to slug him.
  • 26:19 - 26:25
    Then she softened and gave him a ferocious hug. "Be careful yourself," she whispered in his ear.
  • 26:27 - 26:32
    They came for him a week later. At home, in the middle of the night, just as he'd imagined it.
  • 26:32 - 26:35
    Their knock was nothing like Maya's tentative, nervous thump.
  • 26:35 - 26:40
    They went bang-bang-bang, confident, knowing that they had every right to be there
  • 26:40 - 26:42
    and not caring who else came after them.
  • 26:43 - 26:46
    Two men. One stayed by the door and didn't say anything.
  • 26:46 - 26:52
    The other was a smiler, short and rumpled, in a sports coat with a small stain on one lapel
  • 26:52 - 26:54
    and an American flag on the other.
  • 26:54 - 26:58
    "Computer Fraud and Abuse Act," he said, by way of introduction.
  • 26:58 - 27:03
    "'Exceeding authorized access, and by means of such conduct having obtained information.
  • 27:03 - 27:07
    Ten years for a first offense, ever since the PATRIOT Act extended it.
  • 27:07 - 27:12
    I have it on the best of authority that what you and your friend did to your Google records qualifies.
  • 27:13 - 27:19
    And oh, what will come out in the trial. All the stuff you whitewashed out of your profile."
  • 27:20 - 27:23
    Greg had been playing this scene out in his head for a week.
  • 27:23 - 27:26
    He'd had all kinds of brave things to say, planned out in advance.
  • 27:26 - 27:29
    He'd even written some down, to see how they looked.
  • 27:29 - 27:32
    It had given him something to do while the knots in his stomach tightened,
  • 27:32 - 27:34
    while he waited to hear from Maya.
  • 27:35 - 27:40
    "I'd like to call a lawyer," is all he managed. It came out in a whisper.
  • 27:40 - 27:43
    "You can do that," the man said. "But hear me out first."
  • 27:44 - 27:48
    Greg found his voice. "I'd like to see your badge."
  • 27:49 - 27:58
    The man's basset-hound face lit up as he hissed a laugh. "Oh, Greg, buddy. I'm not a cop. I work for --"
  • 27:58 - 28:03
    He named the DC firm in Google's employ. The inventors of swiftboating.
  • 28:04 - 28:07
    "You're a Googler. You're part of the family.
  • 28:07 - 28:12
    We wouldn't send the police after you without talking with you first. There's an offer I'd like to make."
  • 28:13 - 28:15
    Greg made coffee.
  • 28:15 - 28:19
    It gave him something to do with his hands while he tried to find that bravery he'd been honing all week.
  • 28:19 - 28:24
    "I'll go to the press," he said. "I've written this all up. I'll go straight to them."
  • 28:25 - 28:27
    The guy nodded as if thinking it over.
  • 28:27 - 28:32
    "Well, sure. You could walk into the Chronicle's office in the morning and spill everything you need.
  • 28:32 - 28:36
    They'd try to find a confirming source. They won't find it.
  • 28:36 - 28:39
    Maybe you'll try to show them what your profile looks like today?
  • 28:39 - 28:44
    Well, tell you what, it looks just like it looked the day you landed at SFO.
  • 28:45 - 28:51
    Greg, buddy, why don't you hear me out before you start trying to figure out how to fight me?
  • 28:51 - 28:57
    I'm in the win-win business. I'm in the business of figuring out how to get all parties what they need.
  • 28:58 - 29:03
    I'm very good at it. You don't even want to know what I'm billing Google for this little tete-a-tete.
  • 29:03 - 29:07
    By the way, those are excellent beans, but you want to give them a little rinse first,
  • 29:07 - 29:12
    takes some of the bitterness out and brings up the oils. Here, pass me a colander?"
  • 29:13 - 29:18
    Greg watched in numb bemusement as the man took off his jacket and hung it over a kitchen chair,
  • 29:18 - 29:23
    then undid his cuffs and rolled them up, slipping a cheap digital watch into his pocket.
  • 29:23 - 29:28
    Then he poured the beans back out of the grinder and into Greg's colander and did things at the sink.
  • 29:29 - 29:35
    He was a little pudgy, and very pale. He needed a haircut -- he had unruly curls at his neck.
  • 29:35 - 29:37
    It made Greg relax, somehow.
  • 29:38 - 29:43
    This guy had the social gracelessness of a nerd, felt like a real Googler, obsessed with the minutiae.
  • 29:43 - 29:46
    He knew his way around a coffee-grinder, too.
  • 29:46 - 29:49
    "We're drafting a team for Building 49 --"
  • 29:49 - 29:52
    "There is no building 49," Greg said, automatically.
  • 29:52 - 29:58
    "Yeah," the guy said, with a private little smile. "There's no Building 49.
  • 29:59 - 30:03
    And we're putting together a team, with its own buginizer, to own googlecleaner.
  • 30:03 - 30:08
    Maya's code wasn't very efficient. Every time someone runs it, it clobbers the whole farm.
  • 30:08 - 30:13
    And it's got plenty of bugs. We've asked around and there's consensus on this.
  • 30:13 - 30:17
    You'd be the right guy, and it wouldn't matter what you knew if you were back inside --"
  • 30:18 - 30:20
    "No, I wouldn't," Greg said. "You're on crack."
  • 30:20 - 30:27
    "Hear me out. There's money involved. Good work, too. Smart colleagues. A direction for your life.
  • 30:27 - 30:30
    A chance to participate in the political life of your country --"
  • 30:30 - 30:35
    Greg gave a bitter laugh. "Unbelievable," he said.
  • 30:35 - 30:41
    "If you think I'm going to help you smear political candidates in exchange for favors, you're even crazier than I thought."
  • 30:42 - 30:50
    "Greg," he said, "Greg, you're right. That was dumb. No one is going to do that anymore.
  • 30:50 - 30:58
    We're just going to -- clean things up a little. For some select people. You know what I mean, right?
  • 30:58 - 31:02
    Every Google profile is a little scary under close inspection.
  • 31:03 - 31:06
    Close inspection is the order of the day in politics.
  • 31:06 - 31:10
    You stand for office and they'll look at your kids, your brothers, your ex-girlfriends.
  • 31:10 - 31:16
    Now that your search history is available to so many people, it won't be that hard to look into that too.
  • 31:16 - 31:21
    Your Orkut network, your old Usenet messages, your searches, all of it."
  • 31:21 - 31:27
    He loaded the cafetiere and depressed the plunger, his face screwed up in solemn concentration.
  • 31:27 - 31:34
    He held out his hand and Greg got down two coffee mugs -- Google mugs, of course -- and passed them to him.
  • 31:35 - 31:40
    "We're going to do for our friends just what Maya did for you. Just give them a little cleanup.
  • 31:40 - 31:45
    Preserve their privacy. That's all -- I promise you, that's all."
  • 31:46 - 31:48
    Greg sipped the coffee, but didn't taste it.
  • 31:49 - 31:51
    "And whichever candidates you don't clean --"
  • 31:51 - 31:56
    "Yeah," the guy said. "Yeah, you're right. It'll be tough for them."
  • 31:57 - 31:58
    "You can go now," Greg said.
  • 31:59 - 32:05
    "Oh, Greg," the guy said. He plucked his jacket off his chair-back and shrugged it on,
  • 32:05 - 32:10
    felt in the inside pocket and produced a small stack of paper, folded into quarters.
  • 32:10 - 32:12
    He smoothed it out and put it on the table.
  • 32:13 - 32:17
    Greg looked quickly and saw the rows of results he'd seen on the DHS man's screen,
  • 32:17 - 32:19
    back at the airport, when this all started.
  • 32:20 - 32:23
    "I don't care," he said. "Tell the world about my search history. Go ahead.
  • 32:23 - 32:27
    In five years, everyone will have had their search history ruptured. We'll all be guilty."
  • 32:28 - 32:32
    "It's not your history," the man said. He divided the stack into two piles,
  • 32:32 - 32:35
    and pointed to names on the top sheet of each.
  • 32:35 - 32:37
    One was Maya's.
  • 32:37 - 32:41
    The other was a candidate whose campaign Greg had contributed to for the last three elections.
  • 32:41 - 32:45
    "You get five weeks' vacation a year. You can go to Cabo for the SCUBA.
  • 32:45 - 32:48
    The options package is very generous, too."
  • 32:49 - 32:54
    The man sat down and drank some coffee. Greg tried some more of his own. It didn't taste so bad.
  • 32:55 - 32:59
    It was, in fact, more delicious than anything that had ever come out of his kitchen.
  • 32:59 - 33:01
    The man knew what he was doing.
  • 33:02 - 33:04
    The best years of Greg's life had been spent at Google.
  • 33:04 - 33:11
    Smart people. Amazing work environment. Wonderful technology. Nothing in the world like it.
  • 33:12 - 33:15
    When you worked at G, you had the best model train set in the universe to play with.
  • 33:15 - 33:17
    Organizing all of human knowledge.
  • 33:18 - 33:21
    "You can pick your team, of course," the man said.
  • 33:21 - 33:25
    Greg poured himself another cup of delicious coffee.
  • 33:25 - 33:27
    The new Congress took eleven working days
  • 33:27 - 33:31
    to pass the Securing and Enumerating America's Communications and Hypertext Act,
  • 33:31 - 33:39
    which authorized the DHS and the NSA to outsource up to 80 percent of its intelligence and analysis work to private contractors.
  • 33:39 - 33:44
    Theoretically, the contracts were open to a competitive bidding process, but within the secure group at Google,
  • 33:44 - 33:48
    in building 49, there was no question of who would win those contracts.
  • 33:48 - 33:53
    If Google had spent $15 billion on a program to catch bad guys at the border,
  • 33:53 - 33:57
    you can bet that they would have caught them -- governments just aren't equipped to Do Search Right.
  • 33:58 - 34:01
    Greg looked himself in the eye that morning as he shaved
  • 34:01 - 34:05
    -- the security minders didn't like hacker-stubble, and they weren't shy about telling you so --
  • 34:05 - 34:11
    and realized that today was his first day as a de facto intelligence agent in the US government.
  • 34:11 - 34:16
    How bad would it be? Wasn't it better to have Google doing this stuff than some ham-fisted spook?
  • 34:17 - 34:23
    He had himself convinced by the time he parked at the Googleplex, among the hybrid cars and bulging bike-racks.
  • 34:23 - 34:27
    He stopped for an organic smoothie on the way to his desk, then sat down and sipped.
  • 34:29 - 34:32
    The rumpled man hadn't been to the G since Greg went back to work,
  • 34:32 - 34:35
    but it often felt like his influence was all around them in building 49.
  • 34:35 - 34:37
    He wasn't any less rumpled today
  • 34:37 - 34:44
    -- he could have been wrapped in saran-wrap on the day he brought Greg back to work and refrigerated for all that he hadn't changed a hair.
  • 34:44 - 34:47
    "Hi, Greg," he said, sliding into the chair next to his.
  • 34:47 - 34:50
    His podmates stood up in unison and left the room.
  • 34:50 - 34:57
    "Just tell me what it is," Greg said. "Just spit it out. You want me to pwn NORAD and start World War III, right?"
  • 34:57 - 35:02
    "Nothing so obvious," the man said, patting his shoulder. "Just a little search-job."
  • 35:03 - 35:04
    "Yeah?"
  • 35:04 - 35:09
    "There's a person we want to find. A person who's left the country, apparently headed for Mexico.
  • 35:09 - 35:13
    She knows certain things that are, as of today, classified.
  • 35:13 - 35:15
    She needs to be briefed on her new responsibilities."
  • 35:15 - 35:20
    Greg stood up. "I'm not going to find Maya for you." He pulled on his jacket.
  • 35:20 - 35:24
    "There are plenty of people here who will. It's up to you, though.
  • 35:24 - 35:29
    You can work here with her, being productive, or you can find out just how rotten life can get
  • 35:29 - 35:32
    -- while she works here, being productive with your co-workers."
  • 35:34 - 35:37
    Greg stared at him, his hands balled into fists.
  • 35:37 - 35:42
    "Come on," the rumpled man said. "Greg, we both know how this goes.
  • 35:42 - 35:48
    When you said yes to me in your kitchen, you lost the option of saying no. It's not so bad, is it?
  • 35:48 - 35:53
    Who would you rather have doing the nation's intelligence: you and your pals here in the Valley,
  • 35:53 - 35:56
    or a bunch of straight-edge code-grinders in Virginia?"
  • 35:56 - 35:58
    Greg turned on his heel and left.
  • 35:58 - 36:04
    He made it all the way to the parking lot before he stopped and kicked a wall so hard he felt something give way in his foot.
  • 36:05 - 36:10
    Then he limped back to his desk, hung his jacket on his chair, and logged back in.
  • 36:11 - 36:15
    It was a week later when his key-card failed to open the door to Building 49.
  • 36:15 - 36:20
    The idiot red LED shone at him every time he swiped it. He swiped it and swiped it.
  • 36:20 - 36:25
    Any other building and there'd be someone to tailgate on, people trickling in and out all day.
  • 36:25 - 36:29
    But the Googlers in 49 only emerged for meals, and sometimes not even that.
  • 36:29 - 36:33
    Swipe, swipe, swipe.
  • 36:33 - 36:36
    "Greg, can I see you, please?"
  • 36:36 - 36:39
    The rumpled man hadn't shaved in a couple of days.
  • 36:39 - 36:43
    He put an arm around Greg's shoulders and Greg smelled his citrusy aftershave.
  • 36:44 - 36:48
    It was the same cologne that his divemaster in Baja had worn when they went out to the bars in the evening.
  • 36:48 - 36:53
    Greg couldn't remember his name. Juan-Carlos? Juan-Luis?
  • 36:54 - 36:58
    The man's arm around his shoulders was firm, steering him away from the door,
  • 36:58 - 37:01
    out onto the immaculate lawn, past the kitchen's herb garden.
  • 37:02 - 37:04
    "We're giving you a couple of days off," he said.
  • 37:05 - 37:09
    Greg felt a cold premonition that sank all the way to his balls.
  • 37:09 - 37:12
    "Why?" Had he done something wrong? Was he going to jail?
  • 37:13 - 37:18
    "It's Maya." The man turned him around, met his eyes with his bottomless basset-hound gaze.
  • 37:18 - 37:25
    "It's Maya. Killed herself. In Guatemala. I'm sorry, Greg."
  • 37:27 - 37:33
    Greg seemed to hurtle away from himself, to a place miles above, a Google Earth view of the Googleplex,
  • 37:33 - 37:39
    looking down on himself and the rumpled man as a pair of dots, two pixels, tiny and insignificant.
  • 37:39 - 37:44
    He willed himself to tear at his hair, to drop to his knees and weep.
  • 37:44 - 37:49
    From a long way away, he heard himself say, "I don't need any time off. I'm OK."
  • 37:50 - 37:53
    From a long way away, he heard the rumpled man insist.
  • 37:53 - 37:55
    But one-pixel Greg wouldn't be turned aside.
  • 37:55 - 38:04
    The argument persisted for a long time, and then the two pixels moved into Building 49 and the door swung shut behind them.
  • 38:15 - 38:21
    Doctorow: This one came as a commission from Radar magazine -- now defunct, a casualty of the 2008 crash,
  • 38:21 - 38:26
    but in 2007, it was the most widely circulated "lifestyle" magazine in the US.
  • 38:26 - 38:31
    They asked me to write about "the day Google became evil."
  • 38:31 - 38:35
    I didn't want to cheap out and just write about the company selling out to some evil millionaire.
  • 38:35 - 38:39
    If Google ever turned evil, it would be because a) evil had a compelling business-model
  • 38:39 - 38:43
    and b) evil lay at the end of a compelling technical challenge.
  • 38:43 - 38:48
    I spent a lot of time talking off-the-record to Googlers, who are, to a one, the nicest people I know
  • 38:48 - 38:53
    (OK, one exception springs to mind, but let's not air our dirty laundry in public, right?).
  • 38:53 - 38:58
    I also had an incredibly productive conversation with the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Kevin Bankston,
  • 38:58 - 39:01
    a profound and sharp-witted privacy lawyer.
  • 39:01 - 39:06
    I wanted to capture a company that was full of good people who do bad. There are lots of these.
  • 39:06 - 39:11
    For example, all the Microsoft employees I know are fantastic and smart and caring and principled.
  • 39:11 - 39:15
    But ethically and technically, most of what comes out of Redmond is a train-wreck.
  • 39:15 - 39:19
    It's anti-synergy: a firm that is far less than the sum of its parts.
  • 39:19 - 39:22
    I could easily see Google turning into that.
  • 39:22 - 39:26
    I wish I understood how groups of good people trying to do good can do bad.
Title:
Cory Doctorow's "Scroogled" read by Wil Wheaton
Description:

This "video" is just a support for multilingual subtitling of the audio recording of Cory Doctorow's "Scroogled" short story, from his With a Little Help collection, as read by Wil Wheaton.Sources:With a Little Help
craphound.com/walh
(collection of all versions of all stories, and description of the publishing project);Audio of Will Wheaton's recording downloadable from craphound.com/walh/audiobook/download-audiobook
Translations of "Scroogled" and derived works: craphound.com/?p=1902

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Captions Requested

English subtitles

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