From: gnu (John Gilmore)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com, gnu
Message Hash: e860eba2186abe8908ae6badc50620165d9e033a5676fbb5e58334c19cc42b9f
Message ID: <9308092241.AA21147@toad.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-08-09 22:41:52 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 9 Aug 93 15:41:52 PDT
From: gnu (John Gilmore)
Date: Mon, 9 Aug 93 15:41:52 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com, gnu
Subject: Big Brother's New Eyes -- Economist, August 7th
Message-ID: <9308092241.AA21147@toad.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
The Economist magazine has two articles on monitoring of citizens'
activities in its August 7th issue, and mentions the problem on the
cover. In its editorial on p. 16, it comes out in favor of anonymity:
"Even if the anonymous technologies are more expensive and less
convenient than the data-scooping alternative, the price will
be worth paying."
It also reports on road-toll charging systems starting on p. 71, with
a minor mention of anonymous toll payment. The headline is "Big
Brother is Clocking You" with a subheading of "The technology that
promises fewer traffic jams may damage your civil liberties."
The Economist is one of the truly outstanding magazines of the decade,
by the way. It sounds stogdy but it is anything but, and it tends to spot
trends long before the rest of the world has noticed them.
John
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1993-08-09 (Mon, 9 Aug 93 15:41:52 PDT) - Big Brother’s New Eyes – Economist, August 7th - gnu (John Gilmore)