New York State Starts Walking Back On Transparency; Grants Gun Owners Exemption From Disclosure Of Public Records
from the first,-they-came-for-my-interactive-map... dept
The backlash against the publication of gun owner data by the Lower Hudson Journal News late last month has turned into a backlash against "freedom of information" laws. Putnam County officials started this regressive ball rolling by refusing to comply with the Journal News' request, breaking a state law in the process. No matter, Sen. Greg Ball was there to share the limelight and offer to rewrite the state law to limit gun owner date to prosecutors and law enforcement.As was noted then, making exceptions to freedom of information requests on the basis of public outcry is a giant step in the wrong direction. Holding back public records or granting disclosure exceptions simply because the information might be used in an unpleasant way just makes it easier to make more exceptions and withhold more information down the road. This is the direction the state of New York is now headed with the passage of its gun control bill, the NY SAFE Act of 2013, an exemption for gun owners that flies in the face of Governor Cuomo's earlier transparency promises.
Last week, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo laid out an ambitious open government agenda in his state of the state address, declaring his commitment to provide "easy, single-stop access to statewide and agency-level data, reports, statistics, compilations and information." This week he carved out his first exemption: gun owners.
The anonymity exemption, which requires gun owners to provide a reason they wish to remain out of the public record, is a response to the controversy that followed the Journal News' publication last month of the names and addresses of over 33 thousand hand gun permit holders in Rockland and Westchester counties, north of New York City.The problems with this exemption are obvious. If one set of individuals can effectively "opt out," what's to stop others from claiming they too should be exempted?
"It sets a dangerous precedent," says Noel Hidalgo, Code for America's New York Program Manager, "where special interest groups can exempt their communities." If firearm owners can create an exemption from public disclosure, than why couldn't licensed livery car drivers, healthcare workers, sellers of pesticide or lawyers?For that matter, what's to stop those in power from crafting even broader exemptions for favored lobbying groups, colleagues or for any other data they wish to keep hidden from the public? It's not so much that this exemption is a slippery slope -- that slope has long since been descended -- it's that placing arbitrary limitations on requested data, especially in response to an isolated incident, compounds an existent problem: the ongoing lack of transparency in many government agencies.
Even worse, there were better ways to handle the gun owner data that would not have required altering existing laws by adding an exploitable exemption:
"Some of the concern with the Journal News dataset is the fact that they put an individual's name and address with a gun," says Hidalgo. According to him, listing gun permit holders by name and zip code or census tract could better satisfy the competing demands the personal privacy and public disclosure, than simply exempting data from public record.The law gives gun owners a chance to opt out using one of two reasons: belief that publication of their data would put their life at risk (police officers, former witnesses/jurors in criminal cases, etc.) or the wish to avoid "unwarranted harassment." Bob Freeman, the executive director of New York's Committee on Open Government, says this wording is way too vague.
"We're all involved in 'unwarranted harassment' every day of our lives," he continues, referring to his full e-mail box in the morning, and unsolicited calls from journalists as potential examples.Meanwhile, Sen. Greg Ball's legislation is still in motion, looking to exempt pistol purchasers from FOI disclosure. Those registering for a pistol permit will be automatically opted-in under his proposal. Ball lays part of the blame on modern technology, suggesting that if the information were only a bit harder to attach to a Google map, he'd leave the law unchanged.
When initially established the Freedom of Information Law couldn't possibly be written to factor in modern technology including social media tools (Twitter, Facebook, etc) or advanced mapping technologies like Google Maps. These social media advancements emerged as commonplace tools to access personal information after many public information laws were passed. The advent of the Internet must be considered when working to ensure every citizen of New York has both their privacy and safety protected, guaranteed by law.Like many lawmakers, Ball only wants to update laws to reflect the "advent of the internet" when it aligns with his agenda. We've seen resistance to update laws that operate favorably for those benefitting from the lack of timeliness, including outdated gems like the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act or various copyright laws that proponents want stretched past their expiration date in order to treat file sharing like selling bootleg DVDs out of the trunk of a car. Ball's desired update of the FOI law isn't about reflecting the current reality; it's political opportunism that dovetails nicely into the government's natural tendency towards opacity.
The state of New York has taken several steps in the right direction in terms of transparency. Now it's allowing the prevailing winds to push it a step back.
UPDATE(S):
Some last-minute additions, tacked on to the bottom, as this post has already been "put to bed," as they say in places where ink still hits paper.
The Lower Hudson Journal News has decided to take down its "gun map," claiming that it wished to follow the "spirit" of the newly-passed NYSAFE gun law exemptions. Here's the paper's full statement:
With the passage this week of the NYSAFE gun law, which allows permit holders to request their names and addresses be removed from the public record, we decided to remove the gun permit data from lohud.com at 5 pm today.And, from the if-you-don't-have-time-to-do-it-right,-how-will-you-find-time-to-do-it-twice department, the rushed NYSAFE bill failed to include exemptions for law enforcement.
While the new law does not require us to remove the data, we believe that doing so complies with its spirit. For the past four weeks, there has been vigorous debate over our publication of the permit data, which has been viewed nearly 1.2 million times by readers. One of our core missions as a newspaper is to empower our readers with as much information as possible on the critical issues they face, and guns have certainly become a top issue since the massacre in nearby Newtown, Conn. Sharing as much public information as possible provides our readers with the ability to contribute to the discussion, in any way they wish, on how to make their communities safer.
We remain committed to our mission of providing the critical public service of championing free speech and open records.
A New York lawmaker says that the state’s recently passed gun control law stunningly fails to include any exemptions for law enforcement officers, and technically prohibits police from ever bringing guns on school grounds or possessing extended ammo magazines.Of course, no one really has to do it twice. A Cuomo spokesman has already verbally exempted police officers from the new law, allowing it to join the many other laws police officers are free to ignore. (Jab!) Presumably, amended language will join the rest of the passed bill early next week.
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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–The Techdirt Team
Filed Under: gun control, guns, new york, transparency
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Don't create databases of law abiding citizens
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Reasonable right to privacy
I grant that this seems to be a tricky situation but I think it is perfectly valid to let individual gun owners ask for the right not to have their data published.
Does the government publicly list all car owners? eligible voters? people who get a Social Security check? the people who have green cards? Does the census publish all the details about what households answered the survey and how many people live in that house?
I am pretty sure the answer is no to those questions, why is it different for a non-commercial, private owner gun license?
I am not against publishing some data, just against publishing detailed information that is enough to track down what home has a registered gun with 3 min worth of cross referencing on the internet. The number of guns in a zip code level or census track seems a viable balance.
Now there should be ABSOLUTE transparency to the public regarding who has access to the list and how often they use it. The data should NOT be given to the police unless they have a warrant or reasonable cause (even that is iffy and oft abused).
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As far as the FOIA I'm all for transparency but I don't think the government should be allowed to hand out the personal information of citizens who haven't broken the law.
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As far as the FOIA I'm all for transparency but I don't think the government should be allowed to hand out the personal information of citizens who haven't broken the law.
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the best way to keep a secret is not to know it
The same new technology that makes the existence of these records so awkward also makes them unnecessary. Decades ago it made sense for permits to exist as a sheaf of papers in a file cabinet at police headquarters (when gun permits existed at all-- they are a recent invention and I'm not convinced that they've proved worthwhile). But now a little asymmetric encryption could give us unforgeable permits that citizens could hold. The authorities would have no need to keep a database (although they will always have a desire to gather all the information they possibly can about citizens, because, well, security, or whatever).
The same goes for driver's licenses, marriage licenses, medical records, all kinds of things.
And let's not forget: it's not just the government that wants to know your secrets, some of your neighbors want to know them too. Just as it's our duty to uphold freedom of speech we don't like, it's our duty to respect the privacy of people who are into things we're not.
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Re:
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And even the anti-gun people should be against this, because it creates a perfectly legitimate reason for gun owners to oppose registration in the first place.
'"Some of the concern with the Journal News dataset is the fact that they put an individual's name and address with a gun," says Hidalgo. According to him, listing gun permit holders by name and zip code or census tract could better satisfy the competing demands the personal privacy and public disclosure, than simply exempting data from public record.'
Why name? Why not just zip code?
Either people can cross-reference the name and zip code to find out the identity of the person (in which case deleting the address does no good) or they cannot (in which case keeping the name does no good.) I can just imagine the poor kid whose friends suddenly can't come over because his dad has the same name as a registered gun owner.
FOIA laws are supposed to provide transparency in GOVERNMENT. Not transparency of private citizens who happen to interact with some part of government.
"In response to your FOIA request, the following people were observed by surveillance camera as having entered the North Park women's restroom on June 14." Do you really want the government executing this request for who used government facilities?
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The problem is that gun owners privacy information was only obtained by the Journal News so they could publish a public list identifying which Americans own licensed guns and addresses and phone numbers and neighborhoods where those licensed gun owners live.
Not only should FOIA requests be limited but the government should place restrictions on such information where it pertains to the privacy information of any American citizen.
If a media organization or some individual requests information about anything and it includes personal information about any American citizen (name, address, phone number or other personal identifying information) that anyone who requests that information be limited to such information and criminal penalties be levied against such individuals who reveal that personal information.
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Re: Reasonable right to privacy
I think transparency in government is very, very important. The reason is that transparency protects the public and helps the public prevent the government from collecting "dirty laundry" and skeletons in closets. It is not the goal to expose the assets of individual people who have a reasonable right to their privacy.
This article seems to be more focused on the idea that the public has right to the data at a very detailed level. I would instead expect a Techdirt article to have a view focused more on the idea that it is public knowledge of who has access to the detailed data and when and why the details are accessed.
If you think that the details should be public think of these scenarios in regards to how you would feel if it was your name in these scenarios:
* An insurance agency published a list of names and addresses of those who had supplemental jewelry polices. Imagine the outcry!
* people with drivers licenses and where they live
* people who own chainsaws!
* those who buy more than 3 bags of fertilizer (they could be making a bomb!)
I think we should also be asking why that data is being collected in the first place and is it valid and who should have access to it. What is the balance between the government having more data about us and the perception of public safety?
Guns are a tool, a dangerous tool, but just a tool. So are knives, cars, chainsaws, fireworks, cans of gasoline, archery equipment, ladders, bathtubs, swimming pools, bicycles, and high powered computers. Why are some of those required to have licenses to own but not others and how does that compare to data on how they how many people get hurt by them?
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Re:
I like this idea.
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FOIA and Sunshine laws that help criminals acquire guns are just fine I see.
I think we should publish the information of all the people who do not have any sort of protection against criminals.
But this would be an invasion of privacy, unless it's about guns.
The politicians go into executive session when they don't want to be "on the record" already(to often I might add).
I personally have no problem with this special exemption for gun owners in NYS.
I am much more interested in where and how my representatives make their money. Laws about income disclosure should be updated to more fully address this issue.
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Uhh...
I'm a lawyer. In my area, I have the right to either have my name published on the roster or left unpublished. My home address, on the other hand, is never published unless I do so independently.
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If we're gonna do this, we better start registering people with prescription drugs too and giving out their details with a FOIA request. Prescription drugs can be used for illegal purposes too.
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Sauce for the Goose
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This list never should have existed in the first place
Something exceedingly stupid is going on here.
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Re: Sauce for the Goose
But amen. Amen.
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The idea is if the government is allowed to keep things from us, and we aren't allowed to view their data, then there is literally no oversight (and don't give me 'Congress' as an answer..)
The point gets confused, but we need is transparency of the Government. Not transparency of our neighbors and selves. However, a conflict occurs when the government starts collecting lots of data on us.
Unfortunately, this is almost totally moot anyway. The government hides everything it does behind a shield of national security, and precious few seem to care. (That gives me an idea... all they have to do is declare gun registrations 'classified' and this particular problem goes away.)
(If you hadn't guessed, I am in agreement with those above saying they shouldn't be gathering info on citizens...)
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Amen
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Your car
Your brain... not so much. I think I like this blog better when I don't read comments. Especially today. It's turned into the National Democratic Committee outlet on gun control talking points.
So called "progressives" want to fight the government with pink balloons and bobby pins. Any of you know ANYTHING about the labor movement? Pinkertons? You think the government and big corporations are going to give up THEIR guns.
Oh Lordy... we're doomed. The only people who know what a fight is are on the wrong side.
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This whole nonsense
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Re:
What do you (sorry, the public) plan to do with a list of these people?
I mean, other than come for them one day, house by house, street by street.
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dox fall, everyone dies
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Re: Re:
BTW, the "law" passed in NY against gun owners is unconstitutional and will rightly be ignored by the vast majority of gun owners. Nobody needs the government's permission in order to exercise their rights.
"The Framers of the Bill of Rights did not purport to 'create' rights. Rather, they designed the Bill of Rights to prohibit our Government from infringing rights and liberties presumed to be preexisting." - William J Brennan Jr.
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Re:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wt1Zy_ASNyA
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Here are a few examples:
During the last election I received a notice listing me and all my neighbors and if we had voted in the past. In my opinion this is totally irresponsible, my voting habits are a personal thing and publishing my voting habit increases the chance that I will be pressured to vote (or not vote), pressured to vote a certain way, or if that information is put together with other information possibly endanger my life.
Medical records are another good example. What if we published everyone who had an abortion? How about everyone with HIV? Too extreme you say? How about we simply publish all those whose use Medicaid to gain access to healthcare? Or just those who are on Medicaid and smoke?
How about if we publish everyone's religious beliefs along with when and where they attend church?
There needs to be some protections against people publishing personal information obtained through FIOA requests, or other access to public records.
Yes, I think everyone should have access to public information but that must be balanced with my right to privacy!
Registering my gun purchase or permit status should not open me up to scrutiny from the public that wouldn't otherwise occur. It might encourage me to not register my purchase or get a permit to carry.
Publishing names and addresses of gun owners not only places the life, health and property of the gun owner and his family at risk but also those of neighbors should a thief break onto the wrong home looking for guns or ammo.
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Re:
Funny how many people fail to learn from history.
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Re: Amen
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Re: Re: Amen
Look up Rwanda, Cambodia, Guatemala, Honduras, and of course, Stalin Era Soviet Union, Turkey, and Nazi Germany.
It would take something like 750 years of the highest murder rate recorded to reach that number.
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Tech Dirt a Leftist Pro Intrusive Government Blog? WTF???
This also is a part of the culture of criminalization and medicalization we have that is expanding the purview of the government into our private lives.
This site, which often complains about the government's over reach, has shown in the last 24 hours a somewhat surprising willingness to back the government as long as it is annoying people they do not agree with.
It's fairly obvious the writer here is unconcerned with the rights of the gun owners here. I do not see one, single acknowledgement that this was the part of the issue he disagrees with. He wants the information to be gathered, the information to be publishable, and for the government to stand firm and keep doing things like this.
I'm still for all the things that brought me to Tech Dirt originally, but I am learning some things about this little community that are disheartening to say the least.
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And Self Righteously Too
That's right, they concocted a racist angle to help them disarm the public.....
Amazing. It's a moral absolute to ban things. Does no one realize that guns are not all THAT high tech? That there will simply be a black market? How much larger of a prison population do you Democratic party shills need to support the government takeover of all industry?
Yes, yes, that's hyperbole. I say it because I know the next word out of their mouths will be "extremist!" Like publishing gun owner's names and addresses ISN'T extremist...........?????
Good grief. We can't even get consensus on THAT?
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Re: Re: Amen
Sorry for the sloppy writing. It's been pro gun control slop all day yesterday at Tech Dirt and it really gets to me. Just sort of re-emphasizes that there is no place left in America where people really comprehend the engine of freedom designed into the constitution.
You can't take out the brakes and then act all mystified (And even self righteous and pedantic) when people who know how a car works get antsy about it.
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democracy?
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There is a simple solution to this problem
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Re: Sauce for the Goose
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Re: There is a simple solution to this problem
I swear, you'd think to read this blog lately that someone had invented the end of physical conflict in Silicon Valley.
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Re:
When guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns. And you better believe they WILL have guns.
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A new age?
You only have a business if someone else is doing the work.
This concept, usually wrapped in the colorful garb of "entrepreneurship", is really just the latest manifestation of "Power 101".
Nobody, NOBODY, does enough work or is intelligent enough to organize systems to legitimize their pay being ten, twenty, one hundred times the median average.
The way this is maintained is also quite ancient. First, establish a sense of authority behind your wealth. Second, use that sense of authority to excuse the use of violence to maintain the status quo.
When the sense of authority is threatened, they always, ALWAYS resort to violence to maintain it. What good did the peaceful resistance do for them in China? Or how many decades are we supposed to wait for peaceful resistance to work.
That's why we have Article I Section 8 in the US Constitution, and that's why we have the second amendment. We have the right, and the responsibility, to stop our government, by force if necessary, when it oversteps its bounds.
We are way behind. We do not have a well regulated militia any longer, in no small part because neither the Democratic nor the Republican party represents the people. They represent different portions of our elites, and even more idiotic, they trade off issues every few years because the two parties themselves are nothing but massive institutions bent on self preservation. They literally stand for nothing at all anymore, if indeed ever they did.
So all this nonsense about keeping track of guns really needs to go. If you are serious about transforming this nation and this world, you're going to have to come to grips with the fact that these big boys are not going anywhere because of your online petitions. They will reroute, and reroute, and end around, and work and work and work until they get what they want.
Frankly, even if you did away with all IP, they still will get what they want in the end. Ultimately, fairness for artists or anyone else is the last thing on their minds.
If you want justice, you are going to have to start caring about justice, and you are going to have to think in terms of a government whose roots are deeply and firmly grounded in a just population, the vast majority of whom are able and willing to fight for that justice, even to the death if it comes to that.
This is not a new age. It's the same old ancient age of humanity as has always existed. Technology has not changed mankind. It has simply upped the stakes.
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Re: Re:
"For our next trick, we will now childproof the San Andreas Fault."
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Re: Tech Dirt a Leftist Pro Intrusive Government Blog? WTF???
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Re: Re: Tech Dirt a Leftist Pro Intrusive Government Blog? WTF???
Let me use the Tech Dirt search tool. Maybe I am just blinded by the recent firestorm in the media. But I don't think so....
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Re: democracy?
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Transparency?
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Mostly Not About Guns
They go out of their way to point at 1st amendment encroachments on both sides.
This one, and the one Yesterday taking aim at the NRA, do not.
On balance, I also see more blasting of the NRA than any comparable gun control group.
I can hope that most of the imbalance comes from the focus on the 1st amendment and its obvious close ties to anything that happens on the internet (communication) coupled with an understandable obsession among techies with video game related issues, but holy cow.
I sure am sick of it for the last two days.
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Re: Re: democracy?
Your taxes go up this year?
Yeah, yeah they did.....
Maybe campaign on something besides protecting the wealthiest people from a SMALL tax raise when the economy is in the tank and the deficit is mounting up like zombies in a "Resident Evil" movie.
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West Point Think Tank Comes Out Against Republican Party
:-S
"Oh, you're so paranoid. OUR government would never interfere with the political process. Needing a gun to defend yourself from the government is just paranoid...."
Pfft
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Re: Re:
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Lets publish your personal information
Only a fucking FOOL would think it's acceptable to publish a list of homes that have firearms in them, and only a fucking retard would think it's an assault on the freedom of information...
This article has gone one step too fucking far
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Home alarms
I think anyone wishing to publish the personal information of someone else needs first to publish their own.
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Weirder and weirder
THAT is just bizarre. Busy work.
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- Are medical records equal to gun records?
- What are the boundaries of my privacy?
- What are the records the government have? how are they used?
- Are public records a threat to individual privacy?
- Why are people so scared about their privacy?
- Is a right a right when someone needs to ask permission to have it?
- What are the public records disclosure effects?
- FOIA should be limited if it conflicts with privacy of individuals? - What could it happen? how could it be abused?
Quote:
- Should every privacy concern be regarded as overuling any other social needs? what are the consequences of that? how can it be abused?
- Who is collecting data and for what purpose?
- Proposed rule: Personal identifying information should always be redacted before disclosure.
- Do I have a right to control how my personal information is disclosed?
- Disclosure of gun ownership can lead to increased crime against gun owners?
- Transparency and privacy overlap? are they incompatible? or are just some areas that come into conflict? can it be fixed, what are the consequences? how can it be abuse?
- Do public records can facilitate government abuse?
People are funny, if it was an alleged criminal, nobody would defend privacy or create any rules about privacy or probably force others to make an exception, but now that soe are feeling the heat about public disclosure of just one database that exists today they want more strong privacy rules and don't care about what could happen to important things like government transparency, and how unscrupulous people would seize this moment to abuse it for their own purposes.
The majority of questions here appears to be from people who didn't think through all the issues yet.
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Re:
http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2012/May/Nation-of-Criminals-Selling-Prisons-for-Profit/
http ://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2012/March/Overcriminalization-Making-Us-a-Nation-of-Felons/
https://ww w.nytimes.com/2011/12/19/us/nearly-a-third-of-americans-are-arrested-by-23-study-says.html
http:/ /news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/help-wanted-sixty-five-million-not-apply-20110323-101739-537.html
Y ou mean every American then?
You broke the law already you just don't know it yet.
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Re: Reasonable right to privacy
It is reasonable to not allow any data to be collected or viewed by anybody even if it helps solve problems?
Someone conducting a survey about some disease and its spread accross the country could help pin point outbreaks or catch people dumping nasty stuff somewhere, you would like that for sure.
What you wouldn't like is that insurance companies started targeting or excluding some areas because of that same data.
So it depends, gun data could be useful to flag trends(good or bad).
One thing I do know, the government or any government for that matter will not give up their record keeping and the more they can tell you about it the better, guns are not the only records, there are several other databases and they can all be being abused right now and you wouldn't know about it.
Do you know that people can trace where you have been with your cellphone tower information, that is a hell of a lot more private, how would you know about it if it can't be exposed?
You can chose to not see or you can chose to see it and deal with the consequences, the choice is yours.
Abuse will happen either way.
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Re: Reasonable right to privacy
Want to know who has Guns in their home to steal ?
Just Reference what this Paper did.
They did this in very bad taste and if I had lived in that Region I am sure that Paper would never be read in my home.
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Re: And Self Righteously Too
IF guns are the "casue" of crime, like the media is trying to portray them as being, please explain why England has about FOUR times the violent crime rate per capita as the US, despite banning guns? Explain why, despite there being over 300 million guns in the US, the gun murder rate is about 12,000, down from years ago, and over half of these murders are either suicides or gang-related w/ illegal guns? There were 323 deaths caused by semi-auto rifles in 2011, less than as caused by blunt objects, knives and fists *individually*, yet we're supposed to sit here and buy the notion that inanimate objects somehow cause crime?
There will be thousands of people who will die by drowning this year. Should we ban swimming pools and water? Likewise, thousands more will die in car accidents. Should we ban cars? Some will die due to DUI. Should we ban alcohol? I could go on and on.
The Second Amendment isn't a privilege, nor about want or need --it's a RIGHT. The framers of the Constitution believed that every citizen had a natural right to arms, without government consent. Indeed, the Constitution isn't so much about giving people rights so much as it's about LIMITING GOVERNMENT POWER AND INTRUSION. The only possible explanation for the sudden push to disarm Americans is that the government wants to transform the citizens into subjects who cannot put up any form of resistance. If you think things are bad now, disarm and watch what how much worse things get.
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Re: West Point Think Tank Comes Out Against Republican Party
The Constitution doesn't come with an expiration date; it is the supreme law of the land. And it's non-negotiable.
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Re: Re: West Point Think Tank Comes Out Against Republican Party
=)
Nice to see a friendly face.
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Re: Mostly Not About Guns
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Re: Weirder and weirder
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Re: West Point Think Tank Comes Out Against Republican Party
You don't fight tanks with bullets, you use bombs, you don't go after armored vehicles with bullets unless you want to get slaughtered.
What you do need however is the knowledge to produce your own weapons to counter governments that go rogue, if you ever need to.
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Re: Re: Re: democracy?
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Re: Re: Reasonable right to privacy
Overall, both of your comments make good points. I agree that the goal of transparency laws is to make the government more transparent, not spread personal data of private citizens.
The issue becomes a bit more complex when the two intertwine, as they do here. Wanting to know who has access to the data and why is a key component of this. How that will work out when gun owner data rests solely in the hands of law enforcement and prosecutors remains to be seen. Or not, seeing as they've always had access to this data.
As for the examples you list -- these are all terrible uses of the data. Should that data be available if there's a chance for misuse, as in the case of the Journal News' gun owner map? That's trickier. One newspaper's thoughtless data dump has done a lot of damage and at this point, it's impossible to separate gun registration as public record from the climate now surrounding it. What may have seemed logical a few weeks ago now seems like a horrific invasion of privacy.
As is pointed out here in the comment threads, perhaps the real issue lies with gun registration itself. This builds a list of gun owners that can be accessed at any time by prosecutors and law enforcement as well as many other government officials. Tie this in with increasing gun restrictions and you have a serious problem. If they suddenly decide you can no longer have certain weapons, they know just where to find them. But that's a tangent (at least at this point).
My ultimate concern is the granting of exceptions based on a.) recent events and b.) a gift to certain lawmakers to bring them on board with increased gun control. And as for Sen. Ball, I sense no genuine concern in his words or deeds. He may be "pro-gun," but he's leveraging a situation for political gain. Reading his statements about the paper, one comes across phrases like "elitist eggheads coddling terrorists," not entirely indicative of someone who's interested in taking a dispassionate look at the circumstances and coming up with the right decision, or at the very least, something better.
Now, I may be completely wrong in regards to my stance on this issue. (Reading through the comment thread seems to indicate that's a very real possibility...) The concern I have is that granting exemptions in the face of public outcry isn't the right way to handle this -- just as much as treating every tragedy as an excuse to clamp down on guns, violent movies, videogames, etc. isn't the right way to deal with those situations.
Ultimately, I think the situation went from bad to slightly worse with this move. It works out better in terms of privacy for a certain group of individuals, but it does collateral damage to transparency and creates more wiggle room for government officials looking for transparency loopholes.
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Re: Re: Weirder and weirder
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Law enforcement already has this information. (Not sure if an FOIA request would spring it, what with HIPAA surround it.) Here's what they do with the data.
Wonderful, isn't it? Safer already.
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Re: Lets publish your personal information
Without delving into your first paragraph (nothing in it worth noting), let's take a look at this part.
At no point during any of my posts on this subject have I indicated that I think what the News Journal did was acceptable. At best, it was something it did acting "within its rights," which is miles away from "being right," especially in this situation. What I'm looking at is the fallout of that action and I'm seeing some quick gut-level reactions in lawmakers that hold the possibility of making everything more opaque for everybody.
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Re: Re: There is a simple solution to this problem
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Re: There is a simple solution to this problem
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Re: Re: There is a simple solution to this problem
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Re: Re: Re: Tech Dirt a Leftist Pro Intrusive Government Blog? WTF???
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So Frustrating
Where has the conversation on the economy gone? I'm sure both parties are happy to have a little diversion from that, seeing as how they both SUCK at it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Tech Dirt a Leftist Pro Intrusive Government Blog? WTF???
Obviously there's been a lot of 2nd amendment junk around here lately.
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http://newyork.newsday.com/news/nation/journal-news-map-listed-guns-permits-stolen-from-new- city-home-cops-say-1.4463741
Google. Heard of it?
Obviously there's no hard and fast proof yet since no one has been caught and the burglars didn't leave a little note saying, "Hey, we heard you had guns. Can you leave us the combo to your gun safe?"
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Re: A new age?
They never learn.
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Re: Weirder and weirder
Some cities also require registration for an external alarm that might disturb the neighbors.
The reasons are pretty simple. They need to quickly find addresses with alarms and they need to know who to fine for false alarms.
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Re: Lets publish your personal information
Insults do not make your argument stronger. They only make you look like a troll.
That doesn't help the cause.
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Re: Re: There is a simple solution to this problem
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Yeah but most of the IP maximalist trolling dicks that come around here aren't mighty at all. They just think they are.
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Re: Mostly Not About Guns
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Re: Re: Re: West Point Think Tank Comes Out Against Republican Party
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Re: Re: West Point Think Tank Comes Out Against Republican Party
Which part of "shall not be infringed" do you not understand?
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Come on Techdirt, you're better than this.
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Re: Weirder and weirder
They are using any excuse to get our info. Not just where we live, if we have alarms, guns, dogs, cars, financial info, and every aspect of our lives. Who we talk to, email, what we buy, where we travel, who we see.
http://www.dhs.gov/isis-new-video-camera-sees-it-all
http://www.dhs.gov/lights-camera-k a-boom
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2012/11/homeland-security-wants-more-double-its-predator-drone -fleet-inside-us-despite
http://www.naturalnews.com/034045_Big_Brother_surveillance_cameras.html
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Just stupid...
Really?! Publishing a database of gun owners that basically created an easy to use shopping list for criminals and a easy to find retired/active police officers families is NOT COOL.
There is such a thing as TOO MUCH TRANSPARENCY...
Cases in point .... the time I walked in on my parents when I was 10... Yuck! And the 400+ lb person sitting completely nude at the whirlpool at the gym... again... TOO MUCH TRANSPARENCY!
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Re: Reasonable right to privacy
and yes, at their whim, they don't have a code to follow and if they are having a bad day when you come across their desk, too bad. doesn't SEEM legal to leave an amendment right to someones whim, but that's how it works.
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Re: Reasonable right to privacy
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unwarranted harassment
"The legislation included the word "unwanted". That word must have been put there for a reason. The reason must be to distinguish it from "wanted harassment". Clearly to the person receiving the harassment, it's always unwanted, so this must refer to the person doing the harassing, to distinguish it from "accidental harassment". So as long as the person doing the harassing does so intentionally, it's not covered by this statute".
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Re: Re: Reasonable right to privacy
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Re: unwarranted harassment
Unwarranted would imply that there are times when harassment IS warranted which would be an interesting legal rabbit hole to go down. I can see it now. A defendant in a civil suit doesn't deny harassing the plaintiff but rather tries to justify that the actions were warranted. Sounds to me like time to grab the popcorn.
Unwanted harassment is simply redundant as if it's wanted it's not really harassment then is it?
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The funny part of this
I do not think there should be exemptions to public data, but I also think there should be no list of gun owners. It shouldn't require a permit to carry. Criminals carry w/o a permit, why should law abiding citizens be required to get a permit? Does having a permit automatically mean you will always abide by the law?
As for the governor granting the police an exemption, can he do that? Is he the King of New York? Does the state not have a separation of powers like the federal government? If the governor can allow people to ignore the law, he is effectively creating law. But then again, he is only following Obama's lead.
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Transparency vs. Privacy
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Agree with the Others
One thing that seems obvious to me is that the crazies out there who CANNOT LEGALLY OWN GUNS BECAUSE THEY ARE CRAZY can then easily target gun owners based on the free information AND ADDRESSES they got from these requests (like the newspaper that released names and addresses of tons of gun owners in the region). Then anybody who wants to go on a killing spree will simply "Google" a gun owner nearby and break into their house when they are at work or on vacation to steal their gun. So stupid. Lets just give everybody a map of who to steal from when you need a gun quick.
Tyler
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Richard
Inquiring minds would like to know.
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