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Re: privacy vs. public servants
Responding to Tom DeBoni's message concerning whether or not
government officials should have a right to secure communications.
> I submit that the amount of (real or potential) oversight should be
> somehow proportional to the potential for harm or abuse of power
> available to the individual involved. Surely Ollie North or Richard
> Nixon had much greater abilities to subvert the democratic process or
> otherwise break the law than Professor Smith of the Chemistry Dept. of
> State U.
Agreed!
I agree with Dave Deltorto's idea about "a body that decided on a case
by case (or a class by class) basis what accounts would be subject to
heavy scrutiny". Or perhaps limiting certain public servants (the
chief executive, Oliver North's successor, etc) to a set of
"open" computing systems and communication paths. (Similar to limiting
people with security clearances to sets of closed computing systems,
communication paths.)
Dave says:
> Unfortunately, this begins to create a overseeing body so
> huge and convolute as to render the entire process unwieldly
> approaching on the absurd. I read Kafka's "The Trial" and I don't
> want to face that sort of Juggernaut any time soon.
Unwieldy? Kafka-esque? Expensive? Possibly, but it doesn't have to
be that way. As Bongo says: "The price of freedom is eternal
vigilance." How much do you want to pay?
Eric Fogleman