Dear Anthony and the list,

You do not know how often that I hear this same comment, " When talking to 
colleagues about the threat to our privacy, 
the general view is , ' I'm not doing anything illegal, so I don't have 
anything to worry about.'  This view is wrong. " - I agree with you, but how do 
you educate the commenter as to why this is wrong ?

It seems that the country that changed the Old World is now the one who is 
taking a back seat to the once Old World.  I know that the EU is more 
protective of the citizen's Privacy than the USA.  If you check into the EU you 
should find that they have strengthened their laws on protection of privacy 
along with new departments setup to check-on these protections for its' 
citizens.

We need a coordinated grass-root action to change things in favor of our 
rights.  


 

________________________________
 From: Anthony M. <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, August 21, 2013 8:03 PM
Subject: Re: [lopsa-discuss] Groklaw shutting down...
 

On 08/20/2013 10:23 AM, Ski Kacoroski wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Just wondering what people think about Pamela's thoughts on privacy 
> and shutting down Groklaw?
>
> http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20130818120421175
>
> I have known implicitly for years that pretty much anything I do (on 
> or off the internet) can be and probably is being tracked so I do not 
> have much expectations of privacy anymore.  What has changed for me is 
> the more overt way the governments are using this knowledge.  Perhaps 
> it was always like this and I never noticed.
>
> What are your thoughts?
>
> cheers,
>
> ski
>
   The fact of the matter is that this is a generation of complacent 
people.  It seems that people in general, have taken an incorrect view 
of privacy.  Many view privacy from the view of doing something 
illegal.  When talking to colleagues about the threat to our privacy, 
the general view is ," I'm not doing anything illegal, so I don't have 
anything to worry about."  This view is wrong.  What can large 
corporations do with all of that data?  What can governments do with all 
of that data?  Besides outlining your entire internet life to build a 
case against you out of it, they can outright sell it to the highest 
bidder.  Even worse, it only takes one rogue person to aggregate and 
sell it also.   Think about it.  All of your communications data... Your 
emails, chat history, web history, telehone conversations, TV viewing 
habits, smartphone GPS coordinates every minute, your smartphone camera, 
and microphone conversations, your skype video calls, your android 
facial recognition, etc.  At a couple of keystrokes, government 
officials can REPLAY your life including every step that you make, and 
everything that you said.  But most people accept the fact that they 
are, in real time gathering this.  Citizens are now nothing more than 
pets under glass and happily accept it or are disaffected by it..
   It's funny, one common form of torture is to make a person strip. 
It's demoralizing, since it makes you feel helpless since eyes are 
constantly scrutinizing you.  Privacy is a protection.  Privacy is also 
power.  It shouldn't be compromised.
   Now who would benefit from all of this surveillance?  Top government 
officials for one.  You can direct that department to handover the life 
of any citizen to you for any reason.  That is absolute power.  It 
squashes dissent.  If you personally know that you're being watched. The 
less likely that you would voice your opinion.  Another beneficiary of 
Citizen communications surveillance is the large corporations.  If they 
are a large internet company or communications corporation, they can 
sell that data( your locations, viewing habits, conversation metadata, 
including keywords if what you're interested in, etc)   to marketers.  
If you're bidding on that data, you target and bombard those said 
citizens with targeted ads, phonecalls, etc. And lastly, a rogue person 
within the NSA or government contractor can copy and sell your 
passwords, social security number,  timestamps on your whereabouts, etc. 
to the highest bidder.  The possibilities are endless. If you ask me, 
the real threat to national security is the NSA.  All in all, I agree 
with Pamela's thoughts.  Why have an operation such as Groklaw online, 
when the very people contributing are in danger privacywise?
_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.lopsa.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/discuss
This list provided by the League of Professional System Administrators
http://lopsa.org/
_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.lopsa.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/discuss
This list provided by the League of Professional System Administrators
 http://lopsa.org/

Reply via email to