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Opinion | The right to life precedes the right to privacy Israel today

2021-11-09T21:14:18.073Z


Against the background of the "investigation" into the new app that identifies the Palestinians in Judea and Samaria, it should be mentioned: The theft of privacy is the most subtle means that can be used in the face of the disproportionate threat of bleeding terrorism


A new "Washington Post" investigation has revealed that IDF soldiers serving in Judea and Samaria have a new app, where they can take a Palestinian photo in front of them and know if it is dangerous.

The system is based on early photography of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, identifying their faces in the app and matching them to existing profiles in it, which are updated by the intelligence and the GSS.

Why "research" in quotes?

Because it seems that this time the article was submitted to a newspaper that is considered a tray of money, by one of those left-wing organizations in Israel.

who does not.

We are familiar with these organizations and their suicidal tendencies, but there is nothing new here.

What is intriguing is the reasoning beautifully defined by one of the interviewees, a newly discharged soldier: "a blatant violation of the right to privacy of an entire people."

Good morning to the liberated.

I do not know how long you have been in the bunker, but in the meantime things have changed.

The year is 2021, and no one has privacy.

It's a beautiful privilege that crashed along with the Twin Towers.

Privacy is a nostalgic value.

There are those who miss her and are angry about Islamic terrorism, which is why she was robbed of us.

Most of them realize that there is really no choice, and there is no way to fight the trend.

I guess the aforementioned release has Facebook, so she has no privacy. I guess she also pops up advertisements surprisingly on the exact same topic she talked about with a friend on her cell phone. I guess she knows that every corner has a camera, that there are biometric passports, and presumably not. Yes, she lives in the Gobi Desert with a good book, a water track and a cat - does anyone know exactly where she is and what she's doing? So what's this nonsense?


Is the invasion of privacy in question directed against "an entire people", by definition? of course. As stated in the article, the Faces Bank focuses on the Palestinians. It seems that the Israel Police does not have such a bank that could assist it in its fight against pedophiles or criminal organizations. It might be worth it, but in the meantime those who have declared war on Israel, on all of Israel, through bloody terror against the unarmed, are the Palestinians. The robbery of privacy is the most subtle means that can be used in this war. This measure in the face of the threat is disproportionate. We are too good, too soft. A robbery of privacy, which in any case does not exist in the modern world, is not a violation of human rights, hardly perverted.

Moreover, it is possible that this app that robs privacy will benefit the Palestinians, because that way all the green flashes will pass easily and quickly.

How good it is to be good.

No more long queues at checkpoints.

From now on: scan, flicker, transition.

Quite similar, by the way, to what is happening at the airport today.

Looking at the camera, scanning the passport, the gate opens.

There is also a blessing in this technology.

Prefer not to be photographed?

Move to the Congo.

And about that: I understand that human rights have been trampled on here for years, and really the situation sounds unbearable.

So if so bad here - why are the Palestinians not leaving this hell?

Welcome to their departure.

• Clarification: Along with the criticism of the B'Tselem organization in articles dated 27.10.2021, it should be noted that it deals with assistance to other sectors besides the ultra-Orthodox sector.

Source: israelhayom

All news articles on 2021-11-09

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