Computers, Privacy & the Constitution

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FairInformationCode 7 - 19 Feb 2009 - Main.AndreiVoinigescu
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Background

In the last class on PartFour I proposed the idea of regulating forgetting, forcing data keepers to sunset data. Eben raised First Amendment issues with that proposal, which I think are compelling. However, there may be other sorts of information practices which could be mandated through regulation on government and third parties that may not raise such concerns and that would be useful for providing some protection against losing our identity to those who aggregate information about our lives. Perhaps we can use this space to think of a set of information practices that we would like to see codified, and discuss whether this is a worthwhile exercise at all.
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-- MahaAtal - 18 Feb 2009

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While in theory it's true that government and business can act as counterbalancing checks on each other's power, I don't really see that happening organically around privacy issues. Some third party--read, the public--needs to step in and lobby both--make it clear to businesses that resisting government intrusion carries commercial advantages while making it clear to politicians that regulating business abuses of privacy will be politically rewarding in terms of re-election. Which all requires an educated, engaged public who cares about privacy. That's the first (and hardest) step.

Privacy is arguably different than environmental issues because both businesses and goverment stand to gain from knowing more about you. Their interests align. With enviromental issues, goverment is largely apathetic--open to influence from big oil/the coal industry, yes, but there's no arm of the goverment itself pushing for more fossil fuels to be burned.

-- AndreiVoinigescu - 19 Feb 2009

 
 
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Revision 7r7 - 19 Feb 2009 - 19:05:08 - AndreiVoinigescu
Revision 6r6 - 18 Feb 2009 - 06:35:20 - MahaAtal
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