Little Brother Could Be Watching You, Too
from the everybody's-spying dept
USA Today is picking up on the questions I raised last week about what happens in a world where everyone has a camera everywhere. It certainly is changing the way people view privacy. While someone actually accused me of being a "neo-luddite" (definitely a first!) for my comments last week, I think the issue is an interesting one to discuss. I find it amusing that everyone thinks that just because I raise the issue, I must think it's "bad". I'm just wondering what the implications are, in a world where we all have cameras recording everything everywhere we go - redefining what's private and what's public. While some cases are clearcut, not everything is. How would you feel if your neighbor's "security camera" was recording things happening on your private property?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Cameras Everywhere
Ever read The Transparent Society by David Brin (1999)?
In case you don't want to follow the link:
David Brin takes some of our worst notions about threats to privacy and sets them on their ears. According to Brin, there is no turning back the growth of public observation and inevitable loss of privacy--at least outside of our own homes. Too many of our transactions are already monitored: Brin asserts that cameras used to observe and reduce crime in public areas have been successful and are on the rise. There's even talk of bringing in microphones to augment the cameras. Brin has no doubt that it's only a matter of time before they're installed in numbers to cover every urban area in every developed nation.
While this has the makings for an Orwellian nightmare, Brin argues that we can choose to make the same scenario a setting for even greater freedom. The determining factor is whether the power of observation and surveillance is held only by the police and the powerful or is shared by us all. In the latter case, Brin argues that people will have nothing to fear from the watchers because everyone will be watching each other. The cameras would become a public resource to assure that no mugger is hiding around the corner, our children are playing safely in the park, and police will not abuse their power.
No simplistic Utopian, Brin also acknowledges the many dangers on the way. He discusses how open access to information can either threaten or enhance freedom. It is one thing, for example, to make the entire outdoors public and another thing to allow the cameras and microphones to snoop into our homes. He therefore spends a lot of pages examining what steps are required to assure that a transparent society evolves in a manner that enhances rather than restricts freedom. This is a challenging view of tomorrow and an exhilarating read for those who don't mind challenges to even the most well-entrenched cultural assumptions.
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