This recent debate about untested/dangerous/unapproved technology, such as medical equipment, vitamins, automobile features, is ideological. I'm not likely to convince the disbelievers here, nor are they likely--experience shows--to go read the recommended books which might answer these questions to their satisfaction. But arguing that the government needs to intervene in markets and limit free choice to "protect" customers and consumers is precisely how our present mess got started. And how crypto and communications is being afffected. (Imagine PGP being outlawed because of its "uncertified" nature, the bugs is clearly still contains, etc.) Anonymous wrote:
A lack of mileage standards, which are regulations on technology, can be expected to result in technology that doesn't meet the standard.
No, if customers want good mileage more than they want other features (like prices, performance, 4-wheel drive, etc.), then they'll pay more for them. Some do. Some drive little 60 mpg econoboxes, while I drive an 18 mpg (with a tailwind) Ford Explorer. The market in action. I could do some calculations on just how unimportant the "fuel economy" standards are, but I lack the energy and time to make these points here. Fuel economy standards are about the worst possible case that can be made for government interference.
If medical devices are sold without ANY limitation, e.g. the requirement that they be safe and effective, the result is unsafe equipment. Improved testing technology isn't useful if there's no requirement to use it. And "the market" is composed of people who have neither the expertise to test the equipment before they consent to its use, nor (in the case of someone's who's bleeding or in labor) the time.
Underwriters Laboratories, Good Housekeeping ("Seal of Appproval"), and Consumer Reports are better testers than any bureacrats in Washington, and they are private. Insurance companies have a strong interest in safe equipment, as do hospitals, doctors, and even patients. The specter of people killing themselves absent a government standard is false.
doses. Whether people would choose to eat horemone-treated meat is debatable; I had thought that the right to make the choice was taken by cypherpunks as an article of faith. Without regulation on the technology, even an innocuous labeling requirement, the right to choose is taken away because consumers can't detect the difference between hormone-treated beef and organic beef.
Again, faslse. If people are concerned, they can ask. They can patronize organic food stores, as they do in huge numbers here in the Northern California area. And so on. What often happens with government-imposed standards is that some lobbying group decides that "cheese is good for you" and so gets cheese installed as one of the government-mandated "basic food groups." (If you think I'm exaggerating, you didn't grow up in the 50s and 60s, when the "four basic food groups" had to be fed to children in school lunch programs. Political views have now shifted to the point where soy milk, bean sprouts, and sun-ripened tomatoes must now be included in all school lunch programs. :-}) Government standards are a two-edged sword. Many of us would prefer to "opt out" of their idea of what's healthy and safe and what's not. Motorcycle helmet laws are a good example. Which I won't get started on here. --Tim May -- .......................................................................... Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@netcom.com | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero 408-688-5409 | knowledge, reputations, information markets, W.A.S.T.E.: Aptos, CA | black markets, collapse of governments. Higher Power: 2^859433 | Public Key: PGP and MailSafe available. Cypherpunks list: majordomo@toad.com with body message of only: subscribe cypherpunks. FAQ available at ftp.netcom.com in pub/tcmay