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Salon: The Internet killed privacy: Our liberation, and our capture, are within the same tool
Saturday, Mar 7, 2015 09:29 AM EST
Our historic respect for privacy has become victim to the national security state -- and the Web makes it easy
Its true that snooping has been with us from the earliest gossip grapevines linking our grass huts. And weve endured modern forms of surveillance such as wiretaps and bugs. But those methods tended to be obviouspicture a couple of bored cops sitting over their coffee, listening on their earphones, transcribing tapes, filing folders. It was labor-intensive and tedious. But what we have today is different by several leaps and bounds. Old spying had to be selective, targeted. New spying is like a high-powered vacuum cleaner; one that scoops up every bit of information it comes across, even the extraneous or incomprehensible stuff.
In the pre-Snowden world, the government surveillance programs I wrote about had different names, such as the NSAs Echelon and the FBIs Carnivore, but the pattern was the same: a reckless disregard for Americans right to privacy in the name of our security. Less than a year later came the September 11 attacks, the perfect rationale to dramatically ramp up both domestic and international spying to a magnitude that portends nothing less than the end of this nations grand experiment in democracy.
Now, nearly a decade and a half later, we are clearly losing the continuing battle between individual freedom and collective conformity that has marked the history of human society. The right to be left aloneto think, to experiment, to contemplatehas been essential to the development of individual personality. The private space, protected from the intimidating observation of others, is the sacred ground where self-discovery occurs, and to the degree that external forces intrude, whether of the state, church, or marketplace, the sense of self will wither.
<snip>
No dictator or intelligence agency, with its network of spies, could ever have hoped to obtain such access to the thoughts and aspirations of their subjects that todays off-the-shelf information technology so easily provides. This is the great contradiction of our time: the unprecedented liberating power of the supercomputer combined with the worldwide Internetcredited with facilitating such dramatic expansions of the democratic experience as the Arab Springalso contain the seeds of freedoms destruction because of the awesome power of this new technology to support a surveillance state that exceeds the wildest dream of the most ingenuous dictator.
cont'd...
Link: http://www.salon.com/2015/03/07/the_internet_killed_privacy_our_liberation_and_our_capture_are_within_the_same_tool/
Our historic respect for privacy has become victim to the national security state -- and the Web makes it easy
Its true that snooping has been with us from the earliest gossip grapevines linking our grass huts. And weve endured modern forms of surveillance such as wiretaps and bugs. But those methods tended to be obviouspicture a couple of bored cops sitting over their coffee, listening on their earphones, transcribing tapes, filing folders. It was labor-intensive and tedious. But what we have today is different by several leaps and bounds. Old spying had to be selective, targeted. New spying is like a high-powered vacuum cleaner; one that scoops up every bit of information it comes across, even the extraneous or incomprehensible stuff.
In the pre-Snowden world, the government surveillance programs I wrote about had different names, such as the NSAs Echelon and the FBIs Carnivore, but the pattern was the same: a reckless disregard for Americans right to privacy in the name of our security. Less than a year later came the September 11 attacks, the perfect rationale to dramatically ramp up both domestic and international spying to a magnitude that portends nothing less than the end of this nations grand experiment in democracy.
Now, nearly a decade and a half later, we are clearly losing the continuing battle between individual freedom and collective conformity that has marked the history of human society. The right to be left aloneto think, to experiment, to contemplatehas been essential to the development of individual personality. The private space, protected from the intimidating observation of others, is the sacred ground where self-discovery occurs, and to the degree that external forces intrude, whether of the state, church, or marketplace, the sense of self will wither.
<snip>
No dictator or intelligence agency, with its network of spies, could ever have hoped to obtain such access to the thoughts and aspirations of their subjects that todays off-the-shelf information technology so easily provides. This is the great contradiction of our time: the unprecedented liberating power of the supercomputer combined with the worldwide Internetcredited with facilitating such dramatic expansions of the democratic experience as the Arab Springalso contain the seeds of freedoms destruction because of the awesome power of this new technology to support a surveillance state that exceeds the wildest dream of the most ingenuous dictator.
cont'd...
Link: http://www.salon.com/2015/03/07/the_internet_killed_privacy_our_liberation_and_our_capture_are_within_the_same_tool/
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Salon: The Internet killed privacy: Our liberation, and our capture, are within the same tool (Original Post)
inanna
Mar 2015
OP
blkmusclmachine
(16,149 posts)2. NSA (National Spy Agency)