Risks of Data Integration
The unrestrained collection and merging of personal information imperils people’s fundamental right to privacy and undermines due process and the rule of law. It enables near-perfect surveillance, allowing the government to observe the most intimate details of people’s lives and to scrutinize and retaliate against any individual for any reason. The recent gutting of oversight and accountability functions across DHS and other agencies increases the likelihood that violations of civil rights or civil liberties will go unchecked.
Data integration under these circumstances poses several concrete risks.
Monitoring and Targeting Protesters
DHS has a history of monitoring protests against its operations. ICE leadership has vowed to use its expanded surveillance arsenal to target people who oppose its actions, activities the Trump administration has tried to define as “domestic terrorism.” The agency is already using tools like facial recognition and social media monitoring to identify and track protesters. Agents are even compiling dossiers of anonymous online critics and preparing threat assessments on constitutionally protected activities, despite lacking evidence of planned violence or alleged crimes. ICE has likewise suggested it aims to create a database of Americans who observe and record federal agents, on the grounds that they are “impeding” law enforcement — actions that DHS claims support domestic terrorism.
DHS’s integrated surveillance infrastructure will amplify its ability to clamp down on people who oppose the administration’s policies. DHS can cast a wide net, using AI-augmented tools on consolidated datasets to analyze social media posts, social networks, behaviors, and movements to monitor a particular target or identify potential dissenters for additional scrutiny. Some of these AI-powered analyses may incorrectly flag people as threats, and this infrastructure will make it easier for a lawless government to find pretextual reasons to repress dissent.
Ramping Up Mass Deportations
DHS has also deployed its expanding surveillance infrastructure to indiscriminately target and deport immigrants, focusing its efforts on people who are easiest to locate rather than the “worst of the worst.” ICE has leveraged court records, household and school information, and home addresses to try to meet its reported quota of 3,000 deportations a day, targeting people without criminal histories who are attending religious services, going to work, taking their kids to school, or appearing in immigration court. Immigrants pursuing lawful pathways may be even more vulnerable to surveillance since they engage with a wide range of government databases and thus are more trackable through enhanced data analytics.
These operations have affected American citizens as well. DHS arrested and detained almost 200 U.S. citizens last year, including children, with some caught up in immigration sweeps that profiled people based on their race, language, or employment.
DHS’s integrated data systems supercharge these efforts, amassing, storing, and analyzing intimate information about both citizens and noncitizens. For instance, ICE agents directed to focus on particular communities while carrying out immigration operations (as they did with the Somali, Latino, and Hmong communities in Minneapolis) may rely on analysis of centralized data to quickly generate a list of potential deportation targets based on race or national origin. They might then use that information to indiscriminately detain people in those neighborhoods without due process, based not on their actual immigration status but on their apparent ethnicity, skin color, or accent.
ICE’s reliance on opaque, proprietary AI-powered analytic tools will further erode due process in immigration enforcement. For example, agents may use AI tools to automatically flag people or conduct risk assessments that trigger arrest, detention, or deportation. The “black box” nature of these systems, as well as the routine invocation of trade-secrets protections, limits visibility into the justification behind government actions, frustrating people’s ability to meaningfully challenge enforcement actions.
Viewpoint-based Targeting of Non-U.S. citizens
Data consolidation also amplifies DHS’s ability to punish lawfully present noncitizens for expressing their views. The agency is already arresting people for their First Amendment–protected expression, instructing officers to deny green cards based on people’s political speech, and threatening to deport others for harboring “hateful ideology” or “hostile attitudes” toward U.S. culture and institutions, undermining constitutional protections. Its aggressive enforcement operations and promises to retaliate against noncitizens for their speech have discouraged people from attending rallies, speaking online, or even associating with targeted groups.
The ability to access and analyze large volumes of data in a centralized platform will supercharge these efforts — for example, by creating profiles connecting individuals’ names, social media handles, flagged posts, citizenship status, browsing habits, and location. Even the threat of this surveillance will magnify the climate of fear, chilling speech and association.
Propagating Errors and Biases
Research spanning back decades shows that datasets are inevitably prone to bias or errors, which will propagate when combined. Government databases have been plagued with incomplete and inaccurate records, while datasets purchased from data brokers are often tainted with inaccuracies and junk inferences. These data quality issues can have grave repercussions: People wrongfully marked as “deceased” in Social Security databases could lose access to critical government services. Applicants for federal student aid may receive less money than they deserve. People erroneously flagged as gang members might be targeted for arrest and deportation.
The administration’s recent push to create a “citizenship list” illustrates the dangers of pooling inaccurate data. In March, President Trump issued an executive order that directed DHS to create a list of voting-age U.S. citizens in every state by consolidating information from federal and state databases created for other purposes, including DHS’s SAVE program. SAVE was designed to help states verify the citizenship status of people applying for government benefits and has since been expanded to facilitate searches through Social Security numbers, driver’s licenses, U.S. passport records, and state voter records. Some of its data sources are known to be incomplete and inaccurate, and recent uses of the tool have frequently misidentified voters as noncitizens. While it doesn’t appear that all these data streams are being fed into ICE’s data integration platform, the known errors highlight the risk that combining multiple data sources will undermine rather than enhance accuracy, government services, and civil rights.
Jeopardizing National Security
Pooling data into a unified system also jeopardizes data privacy and national security by creating a single source vulnerable to attacks by hackers and adversaries. Recent data breaches have led to the theft of tens of millions of individuals’ sensitive information from multiple government agencies and contractors. Those breaches would pale in comparison to the amount of data exposed from a master database, providing a foreign adversary with intimate details to use as leverage over government employees or people in sensitive positions.