Why the government should protect our privacy
---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Tue, 12 Aug 1997 20:15:33 -0400 From: Marc Rotenberg <rotenberg@epic.org> To: declan@well.com, Michael Sims <jellicle@inch.com> Cc: fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu Subject: Re: trustee, shmustee At 7:46 PM -0400 8/12/97, Declan McCullagh wrote:
On Tue, 12 Aug 1997, Michael Sims wrote:
What groups want for privacy of individuals:
Government: Lots
Michael, thank you for reminding us of the Clinton administration's valiant efforts to protect individual privacy.
I agree that we should blissfully ignore that we're talking about the Clipper Chip president, the Digital Telephony guy, the same fellow who will veto any pro-privacy crypto bill. We should try to forget last year's anti-terrorism bill, push for roving and multipoint wiretaps, and FBI desires to ban nonescrowed domestic crypto. No longer should I be concerned about the administration's quest for enormous voracious databanks that will be tied together -- airport security, travel records, national id cards. And of course ACLU legislative counsel Don Haines is a fool when he speaks of "the Clinton-Gore effort to hardwire Big Brother into the information age.
Silly me.
Declan is absolutely right. Good thing there are no real privacy officials in the federal government and no privacy laws for the Internet to get in the way of these efforts. Has anyone else noticed that the most sweeping proposals for surveillance are coming from the administration that has backed the fewest privacy laws of any administration in 30 years? Mere coincidence? I don't think so. Marc. ================================================================== Marc Rotenberg, director * +1 202 544 9240 (tel) Electronic Privacy Information Center * +1 202 547 5482 (fax) 666 Pennsylvania Ave., SE Suite 301 * rotenberg@epic.org Washington, DC 20003 USA + http://www.epic.org ==================================================================
On Tue, 12 Aug 1997, Declan McCullagh forwarded this bit of text written by Marc Rotenberg of EPIC who wrote:
Declan is absolutely right. Good thing there are no real privacy officials in the federal government and no privacy laws for the Internet to get in the way of these efforts.
Has anyone else noticed that the most sweeping proposals for surveillance are coming from the administration that has backed the fewest privacy laws of any administration in 30 years?
Mere coincidence? I don't think so.
Marc.
Like duh, citizen unit privacy protection is anathema to Big Brother snooping on said citizen units, why should they care about our privacy? They slowly chiseled away our constitutional rights to the point where we can barely fight them. I've recently attended a SpyKing seminar here in NYC (same week as HOPE) and it was amazing the amount of info you can social engineer out of people. The biggest leaks: your bank, Cable TV, gas & electric companies. Big Brother might as well not bother to keep records with the wealth of info kept by the corporations. But that won't stop them. =====================================Kaos=Keraunos=Kybernetos============== .+.^.+.| Ray Arachelian |Prying open my 3rd eye. So good to see |./|\. ..\|/..|sunder@sundernet.com|you once again. I thought you were |/\|/\ <--*-->| ------------------ |hiding, and you thought that I had run |\/|\/ ../|\..| "A toast to Odin, |away chasing the tail of dogma. I opened|.\|/. .+.v.+.|God of screwdrivers"|my eye and there we were.... |..... ======================= http://www.sundernet.com ==========================
participants (2)
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Declan McCullagh -
Ray Arachelian