Authorities across the United States are investigating after racist text messages – some with references to “slave catchers” and “picking cotton” reminiscent of the country’s painful and bigoted past – have been received by children, college students and working professionals from unrecognized phone numbers in the wake of the presidential election.
The NAACP president warned Thursday of possible broader implications of the hate-filled rhetoric reported in more than 20 states from New York to California, and the District of Columbia. Attorneys general of both parties are condemning the messages and vowing to root out their senders.
“The unfortunate reality of electing a president who, historically, has embraced and at times encouraged hate, is unfolding before our eyes,” NAACP CEO Derrick Johnson said. “These messages represent an alarming increase in vile and abhorrent rhetoric from racist groups across the country, who now feel emboldened to spread hate and stoke the flames of fear that many of us are feeling after Tuesday’s election results.”
What I would like to know, where did these people get the phone numbers and names of the people they sent the texts to.
From what I’ve read, these texts included the recipients names.
I guess personal data in the U.S. is just a big all you can eat buffet?
Recent arstechnica article about this
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2024/11/verizon-att-tell-courts-fcc-cant-punish-us-for-selling-user-location-data/
Yes it is. Privacy is astonishingly bad here. You buy a house, your name, phone and address are a matter of public record. The phone companies are fighting at court against the FCC because they claim they can sell our location data, and the FCC fined them for it.
But your skin color is not included, right?
Not as a public record, but it is demanded as information for so many silly things. There’s the obvious medical records, for which it makes sense (certain diseases are more prevalent in certain ethnicities). But then schools, banks, … it’s mind boggling just how much they care about it. And except for medical records, there are basically no laws protecting your sensitive data, and it gets sold at incredibly low prices.
I’ll bet you dimes for dollars a racist can tell a black person in America by their name.