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Privacy/Property
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Mr. Godwin
- ->
I note that the ruling against INS would probably not occur today
in the post-Feist world.
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Conceeded.
Mr. Godwin
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I don't see how this reads as Brandeis's having a reservation
about privacy. Perhaps the premier legal theorist about privacy
issues in the last 100 years, Brandeis is simply noting that
privacy isn't a given--one must actively work if one is to
preserve it. This is perfectly consistent with cypherpunk
philosophy, IMHO.
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I concur, and add that this is a long cry from reading any
"Right to Privacy" into the law. If indeed Brandeis is asserting
that privacy isn't just "given" (Your assessment with which I
agree) then isn't this a reservation about a existing "right to
privacy"? It's possible, Mr. Godwin that the only level we
differ on is semantics and definitional?
I like the cypherpunk approach, very much. Self empowerment is a
rewarding and self regulating regime. I would like to see
broader remedies available for privacy enforcement. You can't
sit on your porch with a shotgun all day and keep trespassers
off. It's a well accepted premise that a determined attacker
will always prevail, given enough resource. Or at least cause
lots of problems trying. It would be nice if this were an
option, but not the ONLY manner of protection. No?
Cypherpunks is about change of attitude as well not so?
- -uni- (Dark)
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