From: jya@pipeline.com (John Young)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
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Message ID: <199605291544.PAA03412@pipe5.t1.usa.pipeline.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1996-05-29 20:41:58 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 04:41:58 +0800
From: jya@pipeline.com (John Young)
Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 04:41:58 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: UNV_eil
Message-ID: <199605291544.PAA03412@pipe5.t1.usa.pipeline.com>
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21+C, Scanning the Future (UK), February, 1996:
"Dataveillance."
A global trend is emerging toward citizen surveillance.
While authorities speak of the need for data regulation and
people become digital shadows, watchdogs are doing some
monitoring of their won. With interviews of Phil Agre,
Roger Clarke and Simon Davies on invasive and privacy
technology.
These technologies face an uphill public relations
battle. Digital cash has already been widely accused of
providing money launderers, drug barons and other
criminals with the perfect means of continuing their
activities. It's the same argument that was used in the
Clipper Chip debate, in which the US government proposed
a central encryption software, and it will no doubt be
directed towards pseudonymous techniques as they emerge.
Simon Davies is familiar with this type of argument. He
says there has been a change of political winds in
recent years. Where once privacy was used to protect
individual freedoms it is now officially deemed by
governments and corporations to be an aid to criminals
and a barrier to administrative efficiency. "In a
generation, we now have privacy as almost like an
ancient forgotten wisdom," he says. Then he adds: "The
point that needs to be made very clear is that
technology has been misused. It always did have the
capacity, the capability to be a friend to people.
Instead, it has become a potential tool of enslavement.
And it has rendered society vulnerable on a scale that
has never been seen before. It is technologists and
politicians and financiers who have misused the
technology and should be brought to account for it."
UNV_eil
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