At 09:21 AM 2/9/96 -0500, Tim Philp wrote:
Private individuals are not what I was refering to. I am more concerned about corporations who hold information about me and release it to the highest bidder. When it comes to individual versus corporate rights, I am clearly on the side of the individual.
Remember that there's a major difference between "corporations" and "business"; you seem to be mixing them up. A corporation is a legal fiction that treats a cooperative effort by one or more people as if it were a person in itself, and normally involves limiting the liability of the corporation's investors by putting it all on the fictional person. A business is what one or more people do to make money. Most corporations are businesses, though not all. Governments can legitimately tell corporations what to do because that's part of the price of the legal fiction; a government can't abuse a corporation because you can't beat up a legal fiction, though it can say "Poof! You're not a legal fiction any more", and conversely, if the people who own the legal fiction don't like what the government's telling it to do, they can dissolve it. (Governments also enjoy regulating non-corporate businesses, but they're no longer on solid moral ground.)
I have also not suggested some form of prior restraint that would require government access to computers. I simply suggest that should a violation occur, that I have the right of civil and criminal law as a recourse to both compensate me for my loss of privacy as well as deter future damage. A company knowing that civil and criminal penalties could result from a violation would take extra care to ensure the security of my data.
How are you going to _know_ that a "violation" occurred, if company A tells company B your address or favorite liquor? Only by having access to the records of both companies. Getting that through the courts, for only the parts of their information relevant to you, is better than blanket permission for the government to rummage through their files, but after the first lawsuit lets investigators in, everything they've got is clam bait anyway. It's still major privacy violation - for the company whose machines are being violated, and for the non-suing individuals whose data is also on those machines. #-- # Thanks; Bill # Bill Stewart, stewarts@ix.netcom.com / billstewart@attmail.com +1-415-442-2215 # http://www.idiom.com/~wcs