Read What Stays in Vegas Online
Authors: Adam Tanner
Copyright © 2014 by Adam Tanner.
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Cover design by Pete Garceau
Book design by Cynthia Young
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Tanner, Adam.
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What stays in Vegas : the world of personal dataâlifeblood of big businessâand the end of privacy as we know it / Adam Tanner.âFirst edition.
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pages cm
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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ISBN 978-1-61039-419-2 (e-book)
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1. Ceasars EntertainmentâCase studies.
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2. CasinosâNevadaâLas VegasâCustomer servicesâCase studies.
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3. Consumer profilingâUnited States.
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4. Business intelligenceâUnited States.
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5. Privacy, Right ofâUnited States.
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I. Title.
HV6711.T36 2014
338.7'617950973âdc23
2014019481
First Edition
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To Celia, Clarissa, and Adrian
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CONTENTS
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Introduction: Spies
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1
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What Happens Here, Stays Here?
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2
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A Harvard Professor Comes to Vegas
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4
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Casino Data Gathering in Action
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5
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A Celebrity, a Private Eye, and a Hit Man
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6
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Dossiers on (Virtually) Everyone
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7
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Direct Marketing
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9
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The Puzzle of Your Identity
10
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The Hunt for a Mystery Woman
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Thousands of Eyes
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Internet Advertising
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Seeking the Goldilocks Balance
15
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New Frontiers in Customer Data
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Casino Adventures in Three Cities
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Embracing Outside Data
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The Not-So-Enriching Business of Privacy
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Empowerment
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Acknowledgments
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Appendix: Take Control of Your Data
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Notes
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Bibliography
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Index
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INTRODUCTION
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Spies
The Bad Ol' Days
In 1988, I involuntarily became the subject of old-fashioned data gathering. Spies followed me around Communist East Germany and recorded my every move. That year I was visiting Dresden, the great Baroque art capital that had suffered widespread destruction from the massive Allied firebombing in World War II. Even decades after the war, some of the city's ornate buildings, including the Royal Palace, still lay in rubble. East Germany's government prided itself on operating an especially efficient Ministry of State Security, the Stasi, to monitor suspicious activities and guard against potential enemies. The Stasi mobilized their forces for my arrival, and agents made a concerted effort to learn everything they could about me.
I was researching the Frommer's travel guide
Eastern Europe and Yugoslavia on $25 a Day,
and I spent my days visiting hotels, restaurants, and museums, as well as puzzling out how to do things such as buy train tickets when lines snaked out the station door. Communism was crumbling during these years, yet the secret police continued their dedicated vigilance. Future Russian President Vladimir Putin served in Dresden during that time as a junior KGB spy.
On August 2, a mild day with temperatures mostly in the sixties, I strolled around the Semper Opera, a nineteenth-century structure
gutted in the bombing and reopened forty years later, in 1985. The local authorities kept a close watch. Stasi Major Hartmann oversaw a team of ten counterespionage “comrade observers.” They monitored my movements. Agents kept a minute-by-minute log, supplementing their efforts with surreptitious photographs. I was code-named “Kiefer” (Pine Tree), perhaps because I am tall. If they were hoping to catch me sneaking off to the homes of dissidents or photographing military installations, they were disappointed; I stuck closely to my guidebook checklist.
“Here, Tanner, Adam, is interested in the exterior of the Semper Opera,” a caption for one of the photographs reads, noting the time as 10:35 a.m. “During his stop on Theaterplatz, he did not take any photographs, although he did have photographic equipment (tripod, camera bag). He made only written notes in a notebook.”
As I planned my next stop, I studied a city map for a few minutes, then asked for directions. From afar, an agent snapped a photo as that
random citizen, his finger upon his chin in contemplation, answered the question. The Stasi agents pondered what to do about the man amid suspicions that anyone I encountered could possibly be a covert collaborator. In the end, they did nothing. “The man went off in the direction of the service building of the Semper Opera,” the file recorded. “He was not followed.”
Secret Stasi overview of the day's monitoring of “Kiefer” in Dresden on August 2, 1988. Source: Germany's Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives.
Eventually I found my destination, the former Schlachthof Fünf, where American writer Kurt Vonnegut survived the February 1945 firebombing described in his novel
Slaughterhouse-Five
. I stopped by the entrance of what had become a state agricultural institute and asked the guard about the building's past. Was this the former slaughterhouse? Reading about the unscheduled inquiry some weeks later, a Stasi official grew alarmed. Likely he was not aware of the site's literary significance.
“We request gathering of information on the reason for such a visit,” wrote Lieutenant-Colonel Wenzel. “Did he have state permission to visit? . . . What knowledge of German language did he show, were agreements for further contacts reached?” The Stasi dispatched an agent to find out by interviewing the duty guard and researching the building. “The USA citizen spoke broken but intelligible German,” the follow-up report found, citing the guard.
Secret police also ordered a follow-up analysis to unravel the mystery as to why I had stopped at a local budget hotel, spoken to the clerk, popped into a room, and then quickly left. That visit struck my covert minders as highly irregular. East Germany and the Soviet Union required Western tourists to prebook hotels through the state tourism agency. Since the agency vouched for the quality of the establishment, why would anyone need to review a hotel room? Who would doubt the good word of the German Democratic Republic? The Stasi dispatched an agent to question receptionist Karin Zickmantel. She gave my German-language speaking ability a better grade (“good”) and explained that I had visited Room 19 on the first floor. The Stasi decided we had not hatched a conspiracy.