Law in the Internet Society

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DonnaAckermannSecondPaper 7 - 16 Jan 2010 - Main.EbenMoglen
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-- DonnaAckermann - 06 Dec 2009
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Unwitting Victims: The Third-Party Privacy Problem

After revising my paper based on the posted comments, a new version of this paper is now ready for review.

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Unwitting Victims: The Third-Party Privacy Problem

 

How Blogs and Online Pictures Invade Personal Privacy

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 Brian, I looked into your question before posting my essay, and from what I could tell, the laws protecting a person's right to privacy only do so within the commercial context, but I may have misread my sources and will take a closer look at this later today. [See Updated Version above.]

-- DonnaAckermann - 07 Dec 2009

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  • It seems to me that you took the long way round here. The simple way to put it is to say that there is more information around than there used to be. Also, gossip is becoming public rather than private communication. So the gossip has become verifiable, because there are always photos taken by somebody on Flicker, and we're all acting as intelligence agents by tagging one another's photos. Not to mention that all the witnesses are blogging. There's no conceivable way that we can be for freedom of speech and also be trying to keep people from gossiping, even though all gossip is now public and permanent. That took me fewer than ninety words, which means you would then have 90% of the essay available to develop an insight about what happens next, which is supposed to be your subject .
 
 
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Revision 7r7 - 16 Jan 2010 - 22:30:33 - EbenMoglen
Revision 6r6 - 07 Dec 2009 - 23:20:42 - DonnaAckermann
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