Assange's actions are having tremendous subsidiary repercussions.

 

http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/Canada/20101208/wikileaks-threat-toronto-woman-101
208/

 

 

The secrecy advocates are becoming so belligerent and unable to disguise the
true motives.

Now they threaten housewives that can read and write.

 

Does Flanagan have something to hide ?

 

 

 

Vladimyr Ivan Burachynsky

Ph.D.(Civil Eng.), M.Sc.(Mech.Eng.), M.Sc.(Biology)

 

120-1053 Beaverhill Blvd.

Winnipeg, Manitoba

CANADA R2J 3R2 

(204) 2548321  Phone/Fax

 <mailto:vbur...@shaw.ca> vbur...@shaw.ca 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf
Of James Steiner
Sent: December 7, 2010 8:21 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Privacy, Individual vs. Collective

 

It's my belief that individual privacy is entirely NOT the same as
government classification (as secret, top secret, etc) of information.

 

Governments do NOT have a "right of privacy". Our government is supposed to
be "by, of, and for" the people. It's use of secrecy is appropriate (and
should be protected) when that secrecy serves to protect those people, not
when it serves to protect the individuals who do the classifying (or those
they serve) from embarrassment or legal prosecution.

 

Such uses are (and I'm pretty sure this is not just my opinion), illegal.

 

We all kind of "knew" that classification has been used this way. We all
hear or see or read anecdotes. Well, the Irag war papers proved it. As have
all the subsequent leaks.

 

I think that until the government and all its agents demonstrate that they
can use the tool of keeping secrets correctly, that they should not be
allowed to keep secrets.

 

Wikileaks  has done the American People a great service. Now I hope that
they (we) are smart enough, and outraged enough, to move to fix what's
broken. (IMHO, that's congress / campaign finance / influence peddling).

 

~~James

www.turtlezero.com

 

On Tue, Dec 7, 2010 at 4:41 PM, Jochen Fromm <j...@cas-group.net> wrote:

In the age of social media and social networks
privacy has become an issue of intense debate.
Privacy means an individual has the right to be secure from unauthorized
disclosure of information about oneself.

Now if a state has "state secrets", is this fundamentally different from
privacy issues for
the individual (only for the state)? Should
a state in a democracy have any real secrets
at all? And if the state has the right to prevent invasion of privacy,
shouldn't the individual have the same right, too?

It is clearly evil what Wikileaks has done recently,
they went to far this time. But too much censorship
and secrecy is not a good idea, either (as the "top secret america"
investigation from the Washington Post showed). What do you think?

-J.

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