Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    New EU Chat Control Proposal Moves Forward – Privacy Experts See a Dangerous Backdoor

    Technology innovation drives accountancy job changes

    UK investment bank IT outages cost £600k an hour

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Business Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Health
    • Software and Apps
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Tech AI Verse
    • Home
    • Artificial Intelligence

      State and local opposition to new data centers is gaining steam, study shows

      November 15, 2025

      Amazon to lay off 14,000 corporate employees

      October 29, 2025

      Elon Musk launches Grokipedia as an alternative to ‘woke’ Wikipedia

      October 29, 2025

      Fears of an AI bubble are growing, but some on Wall Street aren’t worried just yet

      October 18, 2025

      The sleeper issue that could play a huge role in Virginia and New Jersey — and the midterms

      October 16, 2025
    • Business

      Government faces questions about why US AWS outage disrupted UK tax office and banking firms

      October 23, 2025

      Amazon’s AWS outage knocked services like Alexa, Snapchat, Fortnite, Venmo and more offline

      October 21, 2025

      SAP ECC customers bet on composable ERP to avoid upgrading

      October 18, 2025

      Revenue generated by neoclouds expected to exceed $23bn in 2025, predicts Synergy

      October 15, 2025

      You can now try Fortnite directly in Discord

      October 8, 2025
    • Crypto

      Think BlackRock Is Bullish on Bitcoin? Arthur Hayes Says They’re Not, Here’s Why

      November 17, 2025

      3 Altcoins To Watch In The Third Week Of November 2025

      November 17, 2025

      MicroStrategy and BitMine Strike Together — Tom Lee Says the Mania Awaits

      November 17, 2025

      Cboe Unveils First US Perpetual-Style Bitcoin and Ether Continuous Futures

      November 17, 2025

      FIRO’cious Price Rally Shows No Signs of Slowing — Can It Extend Beyond $10?

      November 17, 2025
    • Technology

      New EU Chat Control Proposal Moves Forward – Privacy Experts See a Dangerous Backdoor

      November 17, 2025

      Technology innovation drives accountancy job changes

      November 17, 2025

      UK investment bank IT outages cost £600k an hour

      November 17, 2025

      Data retention in the UK: How long should you keep data?

      November 17, 2025

      Salesforce: CIOs closer to the bridge than ever due to agentic AI

      November 17, 2025
    • Others
      • Gadgets
      • Gaming
      • Health
      • Software and Apps
    Check BMI
    Tech AI Verse
    You are at:Home»Technology»ICE and the Smartphone Panopticon
    Technology

    ICE and the Smartphone Panopticon

    TechAiVerseBy TechAiVerseOctober 31, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    ICE and the Smartphone Panopticon
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    ICE and the Smartphone Panopticon

    Last week, as ICE raids ramped up in New York, city residents set about resisting in the ways they had available: confronting agents directly on sidewalks, haranguing them as they processed down blocks, and recording them on phone cameras held aloft. Relentless documentation has proved something of an effective tool against President Donald Trump’s empowerment of ICE; agents have taken to wearing masks in fear of exposure, and the proliferation of imagery showing armed police and mobilized National Guard troops in otherwise calm cities has underlined the cruel absurdity of their activities. Activist memes have been minted on social media: a woman on New York’s Canal Street, dressed in a polka-dotted office-casual dress, flipping ICE agents off; a man in Washington, D.C., throwing a Subway sandwich at a federal agent in August. The recent “No Kings” marches were filled with protesters in inflatable frog costumes, inspired by a similarly outfitted man who got pepper-sprayed protesting outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Building in Portland, Oregon. Some might write the memes off as resistance porn, but digital content is at least serving as a lively defense mechanism in the absence of functional politics.

    At the same time, social media has served as a reinvigorated source of transparency in recent weeks, harking back to the days when Twitter became an organizing tool during the Arab Spring, in the early twenty-tens, or when Facebook and Instagram helped fuel the Black Lives Matter marches of 2020. The grassroots optimism of that earlier social-media era is long gone, though, replaced by a sense of posting as a last resort. After Trump authorized the deployment of the National Guard in Chicago earlier this month, the governor of Illinois, J. B. Pritzker, told residents to “record and narrate what you see—put it on social media.” But, if the anti-MAGA opposition is taking advantage of the internet, ICE and the Trump Administration are, too. Right-wing creators have been using the same channels to identify and publicize targets for raids. According to reporting in Semafor, the Trump-friendly YouTuber Nick Shirley’s videos of African migrant vendors on Canal Street seemed to help drive recent ICE sweeps of the area. ICE itself is also working to monitor social media. The investigative outlet The Lever found documents revealing that the agency has enlisted an A.I.-driven surveillance product called Zignal Labs that creates “curated detection feeds” to aid in criminal investigations. According to reporting in Wired, ICE also has plans to build out a team of dozens of analysts to monitor social media and identify targets. Recent videos, identified by 404 Media and other publications, have purportedly shown ICE agents using technology developed by the data-analytics firm Palantir, founded by Peter Thiel and others, to scan social-media accounts, government records, and biometrics data of those they detain. Social media has become a political panopticon in which your posts are a conduit for your politics, and what you post can increasingly be used against you.

    Meanwhile, a new wave of digital tools has emerged to help surveil the surveillants. The apps ICEBlock, Red Dot, and DEICER all allow users to pinpoint where ICE agents are active, forming an online version of a whisper network to alert potential targets. Eyes Up provides a way for users to record and upload footage of abusive law-enforcement activity, building an archive of potential evidence. Its creator is a software developer named Mark (who uses only his first name to separate the project from his professional work); he was inspired to create Eyes Up earlier this year, when he began seeing clips of ICE abductions and harassment circulating on social media and worried about their shelf life. As he put it to me, “They could disappear at any given moment, whether the platforms decide to moderate, whether the individual deletes their account or the post.”

    Ultimately, the app itself was also vulnerable to sudden disappearance. After launching, on September 1st, Eyes Up accumulated thousands of downloads and thousands of minutes of uploaded footage. Then, on October 3rd, Mark received a notice that Apple was removing the app from its store on the grounds that it may “harm a targeted individual or group.” Eyes Up is not alone. ICEBlock and Red Dot have been blocked from both Apple and Google’s app stores, the two largest marketplaces; DEICER, like Eyes Up, was removed by Apple. Pressure on the tech platforms seemed to come from the Trump Administration; after a deadly shooting at an ICE field office in Dallas in late September, the Attorney General, Pam Bondi, said in a statement to Fox News Digital that ICEBlock “put ICE agents at risk just for doing their jobs.” Mark is contesting Apple’s decision about Eyes Up through its official channels, and the creator of ICEBlock, Joshua Aaron, has argued that his app should be treated no differently than services, such as Google’s Waze, that allow users to warn one another of highway speed traps. But for now they must try to make do with a limited reach.

    The politicized removal of these tools reflects an irony—ICE is aggrieved that its own tactics have been turned against it. Mark described a “double standard”: applications of technology that are friendly to the Administration’s goals are going unchallenged, in part because tech companies have become increasingly willing to support the President’s whims. “It’s clear whose rules they’re following, who they are trying to win over,” Mark said. Like other forms of self expression, digital-communication technology has become dangerously circumscribed under Trump; only the tools that exist independent of Big Tech seem like safe bets for dissent. Posting clips of the polka-dotted-dress lady on social media might be cathartic, but it will take the resistance only so far.

    Still, we record and we post because it’s better than the alternative, which is suffering governmental predations in silence. This past weekend, a friend of mine in Washington, D.C., where I live, sent a photo she had taken of armed National Guard members patrolling the Sunday-morning farmers’ market in Dupont Circle. Trump’s militarized policing has operated on and off in the city since August, when the Administration seized control of the local police force, and residents have become all too accustomed to seeing camouflaged troops intrude on our daily routines. Most often, I encounter them walking through largely empty residential streets in the middle of the afternoon, and I take photos with my phone to mark the ominous superfluity of the exercise: our President’s extreme and dangerous response to a nonexistent emergency. Sharing footage is a small reminder that this is really happening. ♦

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleRoadmap for Improving the Type Checker
    Next Article John Carmack on mutable variables
    TechAiVerse
    • Website

    Jonathan is a tech enthusiast and the mind behind Tech AI Verse. With a passion for artificial intelligence, consumer tech, and emerging innovations, he deliver clear, insightful content to keep readers informed. From cutting-edge gadgets to AI advancements and cryptocurrency trends, Jonathan breaks down complex topics to make technology accessible to all.

    Related Posts

    New EU Chat Control Proposal Moves Forward – Privacy Experts See a Dangerous Backdoor

    November 17, 2025

    Technology innovation drives accountancy job changes

    November 17, 2025

    UK investment bank IT outages cost £600k an hour

    November 17, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Ping, You’ve Got Whale: AI detection system alerts ships of whales in their path

    April 22, 2025395 Views

    Lumo vs. Duck AI: Which AI is Better for Your Privacy?

    July 31, 2025102 Views

    6.7 Cummins Lifter Failure: What Years Are Affected (And Possible Fixes)

    April 14, 202575 Views

    Is Libby Compatible With Kobo E-Readers?

    March 31, 202555 Views
    Don't Miss
    Technology November 17, 2025

    New EU Chat Control Proposal Moves Forward – Privacy Experts See a Dangerous Backdoor

    New EU Chat Control Proposal Moves Forward – Privacy Experts See a Dangerous Backdoor Key…

    Technology innovation drives accountancy job changes

    UK investment bank IT outages cost £600k an hour

    Data retention in the UK: How long should you keep data?

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    Welcome to Tech AI Verse, your go-to destination for everything technology! We bring you the latest news, trends, and insights from the ever-evolving world of tech. Our coverage spans across global technology industry updates, artificial intelligence advancements, machine learning ethics, and automation innovations. Stay connected with us as we explore the limitless possibilities of technology!

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    New EU Chat Control Proposal Moves Forward – Privacy Experts See a Dangerous Backdoor

    November 17, 20251 Views

    Technology innovation drives accountancy job changes

    November 17, 20250 Views

    UK investment bank IT outages cost £600k an hour

    November 17, 20251 Views
    Most Popular

    Xiaomi 15 Ultra Officially Launched in China, Malaysia launch to follow after global event

    March 12, 20250 Views

    Apple thinks people won’t use MagSafe on iPhone 16e

    March 12, 20250 Views

    French Apex Legends voice cast refuses contracts over “unacceptable” AI clause

    March 12, 20250 Views
    © 2025 TechAiVerse. Designed by Divya Tech.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.