Law in Contemporary Society

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It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

Why So Few People Care About Internet Privacy

-- By JohnAlbanese - 17 Apr 2010

The Puzzle

In this lecture on internet privacy, Eben expresses that he does not understand why anybody would use Gmail or any other service that “reads” a user's email. In exchange for giving the Google the right to read every email, a user receives about two cents worth of storage capacity. Eben is right; this is strange. People do not want anybody to read their mail that they receive through the post office. Indeed, it is a federal crime to do so. Yet, millions of people everyday have Google sift through their email, determining what products the user would be most likely to buy. Most people probably would resent a friend who picked up their cell phone and listened to their voicemail messages, but people allow Google to do so for the mere benefit of being able to “read” their voicemails in their email. These puzzling situations can be explained if one understands privacy concerns, especially among today's youth, as freedom from being judged in an unwanted way by one's peers.

A Little Veblen

As Thorstein Veblen explicated, one's esteem is largely dependent on invidious comparisons made with one's peer group. For Veblen, conspicuous consumption shows one's pecuniary strength. A person buys a more expensive car, perhaps one that he cannot even afford, in order to avoid being seen as less successful than his neighbors. People are not happy if they consider themselves worse off than the people that they consider their peers.

An extension of this theory is that people are upset if their peers are able to obtain any information that would allow for a negative comparison. Using the car example, Mr. Smith accepts that the car company and the bank know that the car is bought entirely on credit and that both entities had access to his credit report. He would get upset, however, if his neighbor, Mr. Jones, had the same access to the information. This is why the advice to not mix business with pleasure is said so often: mixing them can lead to the disclosure of embarrassing or uncomfortable information to a social peer.

A Corporation Is Not a Person

People are not concerned with a corporation looking at their information to sell a product because it is not a peer and it is not judging in a way that a peer would. A person will never have to meet a corporation, will never have to hear a corporation whisper nasty things about him, and will never have to be compared to a corporation as a peer. The internet is the perfect tool to surveil people. Since users feel that they are interacting with a machine or a computer program, and not another person, there is no fear of being judged.

An Illustration: Facebook

Facebook illustrates how people usually only care about privacy when the lack of it would reveal inadequacies. The origin of Facebook reveals its roots of invidious comparisons. Mark Zuckerberg was in a spiteful mood and wanted to make a “Hot or Not” website for Harvard undergraduates,where students were rated against other students in terms of attractiveness. He hacked into Harvard's servers and took all the student ID photos. When the school forced Zuckerberg to take the website down, Zuckerberg accurately articulated the reason that people were upset: “Issues about violating people’s privacy don’t seem to be surmountable. The primary concern is hurting people’s feelings.” Students' feelings were hurt because they were being directly judged against their peer groups. Concerns about privacy are a neutral way for people to discuss the anxiety and fear of being judged unfavorably.

Facebook, in one respect, is just another way to allow users to display their social worth to their peer groups. On the homepage for Facebook, there is a link to the privacy page. One might expect that the privacy page would concern the release of information put on Facebook to corporations, the government, or other third parties. It might even discuss that it is nearly impossible to delete information from Facebook servers. However, the page is solely focused on determining which users can see posted information, instead of who Facebook gives it to. The overwhelming privacy fear is having people who are not “friends” looking at your profile and making an unfavorable comparison.

Making People Care About Their Privacy

Therefore, to make people concerned about privacy, one must first personify the snooper. “Apple is tracking your every move” is much less effective than “Steve Jobs is looking up your asshole and you like it.” Next, one must show that the snooper is judging them. When I worked on a campaign, the campaign used an autodialer to make phone calls. Unknown to most of the staffers, the autodialer allowed the campaign higher-ups to listen in and record the phone calls staffers were making. When I pointed out to my boss and coworkers that this was illegal, my boss seemed unconcerned and that I was probably wrong about the law. When I said that I knew the phone calls were being recorded because I overheard the field director listening to phone calls and laughing, my boss immediately sent out a threatening email. The next day I received a call from the state director promising that the autodialer would no longer be used. While ultimately the campaign was probably chiefly concerned with the legality of the auto-dialer instead of the staffers' feelings, only the fear of being mocked moved my boss to actually do something.

While older generations have the ghosts of Nixon, Hoover, and McCarthy haunting them as a persistent reminder of the invasiveness of surveillance, today's generation does not have similar experiences to instill the fear of spying. Maybe corporations will one day overstep their bounds and get too intimate (e.g. a Gmail ad for herpes medication), but until that happens, beating the drum of the potential dangers of surveillance by disembodied entities will not cause users to demand more privacy from the computer algorithms that monitor their phones, read their emails, and track their internet use.


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Revision 1r1 - 17 Apr 2010 - 06:07:30 - JohnAlbanese
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