2012/9/18 Spencer Campbell <lacertilian@gmail.com>
It might be of interest to take a person's life and present it, The Truman Show like it's creator had never imagined. I'd suggest producing such content to be banned.
I don't think that's a tenable idea, either practically or philosophically. Nothing short of a 1984 regime would be enough to enforce the ban, and Truman Shows have considerable value from several different dimensions -- entertainment, artistic, historic, even self-analytical.
You forget this, in some senses, IS a 1984 regime. These shows can still be made after someone dies, retaining most of the value without the devestating effects it has on the subject. It's a means to preserve a new shape of privacy. A form of security through obscurity, the only form of security I usually find exists in real life situations.
2012/9/18 R|diger Koch
Fine, as long as webcams are in the board rooms of the world, including the
oval office. As long as black Mercs come only with clear windows and particularly, and most importantly as long as it is not a criminal offense to do complete life logging, including the police officer beating you to pulp for not quick enough jumping out of his way.
As long as surveillance only means that any attempt of yours to watch the watchers is being watched and sanctioned, this has to be a red line.
A twofold of laws will make this happen as much as it can. 1) Never may the recording of an event be illegal in and of itself. This is a "self governance" law. Limiting the governement and police's own power. It mustn't be too powerfull as to prevent people claiming access 2) Any person, legal or otherwise, must make available it's survailance records, freely, in accordance with common conventions. Meaning that if I do record something I must make it publicly available on, say, a distributed open file network. Usenet would be the inadequate present day example. In whatever format and form is common at the time. Freely effectively bans propriatary formats and prevents copyright-ish laws from securing it. Untarget recordings mean survailance style always-on recording. This law would allow one to keep his/her home video's private but requires sharing of the always-on webcam in front of the house. An underlying assumption is that we'll have widespectrum radio-camera's that see everything the birds do now, and a lot that they don't, even through the walls of buildings. Never, I repeat, NEVER, will board rooms of the importants Anu wishes to be public become public. Worst case scenario Space-One will offer "private conversation" trips that pass by the dark side of the moon for the rough talks. Worst because that gives an unfair advantage to those most motivated to have privacy, privacy isn't worth as much to the Green Energy Consurtum as it'll be to Mean Oil Corp. But it's likely nearly as usefull. -- -- Zero State mailing list: http://groups.google.com/group/DoctrineZero ----- End forwarded message ----- -- Eugen* Leitl <a href="http://leitl.org">leitl</a> http://leitl.org ______________________________________________________________ ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org 8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE