Submitted by Gene Howington, Guest Blogger
Reasonable people tend to agree there is both a right to privacy and that it is necessary. But what exactly is the right to privacy? Justice Brandeis famously said in Olmstead v. U.S., 277 U.S. 438, 479 (1928), “The makers of our Constitution undertook to secure conditions favorable to the pursuit of happiness. They recognized the significance of man’s spiritual nature, of his feelings and of his intellect. They knew that only a part of the pain, pleasure and satisfactions of life are to be found in material things. They sought to protect Americans in their beliefs, their thoughts, their emotions and their sensations. They conferred, as against the government, the right to be let alone-the most comprehensive of rights and the right most valued by civilized men. To protect, that right, every unjustifiable intrusion by the government upon the privacy of the individual, whatever the means employed, must be deemed a violation of the Fourth Amendment. And the use, as evidence in a criminal proceeding, of facts ascertained by such intrusion must be deemed a violation of the Fifth.” Plainly put, at its heart a right to privacy is simply a right to be let alone.
However, do we need to specifically protect it or generally protect it? Is that right absolute? Laws, by definition and the nature of entering a social compact, are restrictions on absolute liberty found in the state of nature. One of the larger disagreements at the Constitutional Convention was about whether enumerated rights would serve to unjustly limit those rights versus a failure to enumerate rights would result in rights not being properly protected. This is a valid question surrounding this issue, especially since some would advocate enumerating the right to privacy by Constitutional amendment. There are advantages and disadvantages to both approaches. While specifically defining/enumerating a right creates a foundation for arguments surrounding said right, leaving a right’s definition nebulous allows jurisprudence greater leeway to evolve around fact specific instance and questions that in the long run can result in a more nuanced understanding and application of the right without the constraints a foundational definition might impose. In this light, consider the right to privacy.
There is no denying the intimate interrelation between technology and privacy. This relationship has been long recognized by jurists. As Justice Brandies along with his law partner Samuel Warren noted in an 1890 Harvard Law Review article discussing the technology/privacy nexus, “Recent inventions and business methods call attention to the next step which must be taken for the protection of the person, and for securing to the individual what Judge Cooley calls the right ‘to be let alone.’ Instantaneous photographs and newspaper enterprise have invaded the sacred precincts of private and domestic life; and numerous mechanical devices threaten to make good the prediction that ‘what is whispered in the closet shall be proclaimed from the house-tops.'” [cites omitted] All questions of applied technology and law can be a double-edged sword; one side honed by often valid public policy concerns and legitimate purpose, the other honed by the caprice of unintended consequences. If the proposed solution to bolstering the right to privacy lay in Constitutional amendment, the wording of such an amendment would need to be very carefully made. A recently proposed EU law on its face seems to be an attempt to bolster the right “to be let alone”. Dubbed the “right to be forgotten” on the Internet and set to go into effect in 2014, this law illustrates some of these unintended and potentially dangerous consequences of either being too specific or in lacking enough specificity in defining rights. Let’s examine the scope of the issue by first looking at the EU law and its potential consequences followed by examining the contrast provided by American jurisprudence surrounding the right to privacy.
The dangers presented by the proposed EU law stem largely from the definition of privacy being overly broad. Jeffery Rosen’s excellent article, “The Right to be Forgotten” by Jeffery Rosen, 64 Stan. L. Rev. Online 88 (2012), served as introduction to the proposed legislation. Rosen clearly points out the hazards presented. “Although [. . . ] depicted [. . .] as a modest expansion of existing data privacy rights, in fact it represents the biggest threat to free speech on the Internet in the coming decade. The right to be forgotten could make Facebook and Google, for example, liable for up to two percent of their global income if they fail to remove photos that people post about themselves and later regret, even if the photos have been widely distributed already. Unless the right is defined more precisely when it is promulgated over the next year or so, it could precipitate a dramatic clash between European and American conceptions of the proper balance between privacy and free speech, leading to a far less open Internet.
In theory, the right to be forgotten addresses an urgent problem in the digital age: it is very hard to escape your past on the Internet now that every photo, status update, and tweet lives forever in the cloud. But Europeans and Americans have diametrically opposed approaches to the problem. In Europe, the intellectual roots of the right to be forgotten can be found in French law, which recognizesle droit à l’oubli—or the ‘right of oblivion’—a right that allows a convicted criminal who has served his time and been rehabilitated to object to the publication of the facts of his conviction and incarceration. In America, by contrast, publication of someone’s criminal history is protected by the First Amendment, leading Wikipedia to resist the efforts by two Germans convicted of murdering a famous actor to remove their criminal history from the actor’s Wikipedia page.
European regulators believe that all citizens face the difficulty of escaping their past now that the Internet records everything and forgets nothing—a difficulty that used to be limited to convicted criminals. When Commissioner Reding announced the new right to be forgotten on January 22, she noted the particular risk to teenagers who might reveal compromising information that they would later come to regret. She then articulated the core provision of the ‘right to be forgotten’: ‘If an individual no longer wants his personal data to be processed or stored by a data controller, and if there is no legitimate reason for keeping it, the data should be removed from their system.’
In endorsing the new right, Reding downplayed its effect on free speech. “It is clear that the right to be forgotten cannot amount to a right of the total erasure of history,” she said. And relying on Reding’s speeches, press accounts of the newly proposed right to be forgotten have been similarly reassuring about its effect on free speech. In a post at the Atlantic.com, Why Journalists Shouldn’t Fear Europe’s ‘Right to be Forgotten,’ John Hendel writes that although the original proposals a year ago ‘would have potentially given people the ability to cull any digital reference—from the public record, journalism, or social networks—they deemed irrelevant and unflattering,’ Reding had proposed a narrower definition of data that people have the right to remove: namely ‘personal data [people] have given out themselves.”According to Hendel ‘[t]his provision is key. The overhaul insists that Internet users control the data they put online, not the references in media or anywhere else.'” This is a fine distinction, but unfortunately not reflected by the final form of the legislation.
Rosen goes on to note “Hendel seems not to have parsed the regulations that were actually proposed three days later on January 25. They are not limited to personal data that people ‘have given out themselves’; instead, they create a new right to delete personal data, defined broadly as ‘any information relating to a data subject.’ For this reason, they arguably create a legally enforceable right to demand the deletion of any photos or data that I post myself, even after they’ve gone viral, not to mention unflattering photos that include me or information about me that others post, whether or not it is true.”
Citing a blog post made by Peter Fleischer, chief privacy counsel of Google, Rosen goes on to discuss the EU law in light of the three categories of take down notice Fleischer notes the legislation would effectively create. The “right to be forgotten” as discussed in Europe and proposed at the end of January arguably covers all three of Fleischer’s categories. He goes on to illustrate how each of these categories and applications pose progressively greater threats to free speech.
“The first category is the least controversial: ‘If I post something online, do I have the right to delete it again?’ This involves cases where I post a photo on Facebook and later think better of it and want to take it down. Since Facebook and other social networking sites already allow me to do this, creating a legally enforceable right here is mostly symbolic and entirely unobjectionable. As proposed, the European right to be forgotten would also usefully put pressure on Facebook to abide by its own stated privacy policies by allowing users to confirm that photos and other data have been deleted from its archives after they are removed from public display.
But the right to delete data becomes far more controversial when it involves Fleischer’s second category: ‘If I post something, and someone else copies it and re-posts it on their own site, do I have the right to delete it?’ Imagine a teenager regrets posting a picture of herself with a bottle of beer on her own site and after deleting it, later discovers that several of her friends have copied and reposted the picture on their own sites. If she asks them to take down the pictures, and her friends refuse or cannot be found, should Facebook be forced to delete the picture from her friends’ albums without the owners’ consent based solely on the teenager’s objection?
According to the proposed European Right to Forget, the default answer is almost certainly yes. [. . .] For a preview of just how chilling that effect might be, consider the fact that the right to be forgotten can be asserted not only against the publisher of content (such as Facebook or a newspaper) but against search engines like Google and Yahoo that link to the content. The Spanish Data Protection authority, for example, has sued Google to force it to delete links to embarrassing newspaper articles that are legal under Spanish law. And suits against third party intermediaries are also threatening freedom of speech in Argentina, as the case of Virginia Da Cunha shows. The Argentine pop star had posed for racy pictures when she was young, but recently sued Google and Yahoo to take them down, arguing that they violated the Argentine version of the ‘right to be forgotten.’ Google replied that it could not comply technologically with a broad legal injunction demanding the removal of the pictures, and Yahoo said that the only way to comply would be to block all sites referring to Da Cunha for its Yahoo search engines. Nevertheless, an Argentine judge sided with Da Cunha and after fining Google and Yahoo, ordered them to remove all sites containing sexual images that contained her name. The decision was overturned on appeal, on the grounds that Google and Yahoo could only be held liable if they knew content was defamatory and negligently failed to remove it. But there are at least one hundred and thirty similar cases pending in Argentine courts demanding removal of photos and user-generated content, mostly brought by entertainers and models. The plaintiffs include the Sports Illustrated swimsuit model Yesica Toscanini; when a user of Yahoo Argentina plugs her name into the Yahoo search engine, the result is a blank page.
Finally, there is Fleischer’s third category of takedown requests: ‘If someone else posts something about me, do I have a right to delete it?’ This, of course, raises the most serious concerns about free expression. The U.S. Supreme Court has held that states cannot pass laws restricting the media from disseminating truthful but embarrassing information—such as the name of a rape victim—as long as the information was legally acquired.
The proposed European regulation, however, treats takedown requests for truthful information posted by others identically to takedown requests for photos I’ve posted myself that have then been copied by others: both are included in the definition of personal data as “any information relating” to me, regardless of its source. [. . . ]
It’s possible, of course, that although the European regulation defines the right to be forgotten very broadly, it will be applied more narrowly. Europeans have a long tradition of declaring abstract privacy rights in theory that they fail to enforce in practice. And the regulation may be further refined over the next year or so, as the European Parliament and the Council of Ministers hammer out the details. But in announcing the regulation, Reding said she wanted it to be ambiguous so that it could accommodate new technologies in the future. ‘This regulation needs to stand for 30 years—it needs to be very clear but imprecise enough that changes in the markets or public opinion can be maneuvered in the regulation,’ she declared ominously. Once the regulation is promulgated, moreover, it will instantly become law throughout the European Union, and if the E.U. withdraws from the safe harbor agreement that is currently in place, the European framework could be imposed on U.S. companies doing business in Europe as well. It’s hard to imagine that the Internet that results will be as free and open as it is now.” [cites omitted]
Meanwhile, back in the United States, there is no right to privacy proper recognized in the Constitution, i.e. privacy is not an enumerated right. For this reason, many Originalists argue that there is no right to privacy protected by the Constitution. However, that is not only a reflection of the precise concern some of the Framers had about creating enumerated rights, it is also not borne out by the document itself. There are other rights specifically protected that include privacy components.
The 1st Amendment’s Free Exercise and Establishment Clauses protect the private choice of religious practice.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
The 3rd Amendment protects the privacy of your home.
No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.”
The 4th Amendment protects the privacy of your property (including your home) from unwarranted search and seizure.
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”
The 5th Amendment recognizes that your private thoughts cannot be compelled as evidence against you in criminal court.
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.”
The 9th Amendment arguably recognizes a general right to privacy.
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”
The 14th Amendment, Cl. 1, recognizes a liberty interest (the Liberty Clause) similar to the 9th Amendment and applies that interest to the states via the Equal Protection Clause.
1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”
Some 10thers (i.e. people who don’t recognize/understand the precedent that has evolved around the 1oth Amendment and State’s Rights) would argue that the 10th Amendment creates a specific right to privacy because it’s not enumerated and “[t]he powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” This is specious reasoning because there is a clearly a Federal interest in privacy created by the 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 9th and 14th Amendments. Many if not most 1others have an expressed interest in circumventing Federal anti-discrimination laws which are largely based upon the 14th Amendment by improperly invoking the issue of State’s Rights. For the purposes of this discussion, the use of the 10th Amendment for invoking privacy is not only improper, but unnecessary. While there may be valid State’s Rights issues out there, privacy isn’t one of them. It’s a right the Founders clearly considered (and considered important) even if they were not specific in addressing it.
In addition, there is considerable precedent developed in the jurisprudence surrounding the right to privacy defining both the right and the valid Federal interest in it. For the sake of brevity, general cites to all cases referred to in the following paragraph are provided at the end of the article. Meyer v. Nebraska held that there is a privacy interest in allowing schools to teach foreign languages to children earlier than the 8th grade. The reasoning in Meyer was based largely upon a failure by the state to show a compelling interest, but it recognized a common law liberty interest in “acquiring useful knowledge” and equated that interest to free exercise interests which are protected by the 1st Amendment. Meyer and the 14th Amendment were later the basis for the ruling in finding a privacy interest Pierce v Society of Sisters in making private and/or parochial schools available and overturning a state law that would have effectively banned them. Griswold v. Connecticut held there is a privacy interest in the possession, sale, and distribution of contraceptives to married couples based largely upon the 9th and 14th Amendments. Based on the 1st and 4th Amendment, in Stanley v. Georgia, the Court unanimously held there is a privacy interest in possessing and viewing pornography even if that pornography was otherwise actionable against a manufacturer or distributor. Famously in Roe v. Wade, the Court expounded upon the 9th and 14th Amendment privacy rights found in Griswold to recognize women have a privacy right to have an abortion. Some courts have expanded the right to privacy and others have imposed limits. Using the rationales of both Griswold and Stanley in addition to protections found in the Alaska State Constitution, the Supreme Court of Alaska in Ravin v. State found constitutional protection for the right of a citizen to possess and use small quantities of marijuana in his own home. In contrast, the 14th Amendment reasoning for privacy was limited by SCOTUS in Kelly v. Johnson, where a local regulation defining proper grooming for police officers didn’t violate the officer’s 14th Amendment rights, but noted that a regulation defining proper grooming for the public probably would (baggy pants attackers take note!). Cruzan v. Missouri Dep’t. of Health found a protected privacy interest in the decision to withdraw from life prolonging medical treatments while recognizing the state had a valid interest in imposing certain conditions on the exercise of rights in such decisions. SCOTUS also reaffirmed a broad interpretation of privacy based on the 14th Amendment’s Liberty and Due Process Clauses in Lawrence v. Texas where they found Texas guilty of unconstitutionally infringing upon the rights of two gay men to their private lives and determine the nature of their private sexual lives by prosecuting them for a state law prohibiting sodomy.
Although it may seem unwieldy to prefer a case by case analysis of a nebulously defined right, it is clear that doing so does indeed allow for a more nuanced understanding of a right and allows better for unidentified challenges of that right to arise and filter through the courts where a more specific definition might prematurely terminate causes of action that could have merit and benefit greater justice for all. Consider this flexibility in light such events as the advent of HIPPA and the repeated issues that appear around the privacy and opt out policies of electronic social networks like Facebook, Google and Twitter. Clearly there is a right to privacy and that right needs to be protected as does free speech and freedom of the press. However, it seems to be just as easy to create conditions ripe for infringing upon free speech, freedom of the press and create an environment of historical revisionism as the EU law might in pursuit of privacy. Just so, it easy to not go far enough as many in the U.S. think is their current situation concerning privacy.
Would a right to privacy be better served by Constitutional amendment? Or by relying upon precedent and regulation as technology evolves? Should those protections be specific or as general as possible? Can you foresee other potentially negative consequences of specifically defining and protecting privacy? Of generally defining and protecting privacy? How should America better protect the privacy rights of citizens?
What do you think?
Source(s): “The Right to be Forgotten” by Jeffery Rosen, 64 Stan. L. Rev. Online 88 (2012), Commission Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council, art. 4(2), COM (2012) 11 final (Jan. 25, 2012) (.pdf), U.S. Constitution, The Atlantic.com, Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390 (1923), Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510 (1925), Olmstead v. U.S., 277 U.S. 438 (1928), Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965), Stanley v. Georgia, 394 U.S. 557 (1969), Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), Ravin v. State, 537 P.2d 494 (Alaska 1975), Kelley v. Johnson, 425 U.S. 238 (1976), Cruzan v. Missouri Dep’t. of Health, 497 U.S. 261 (1990), Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003), “The Right To Privacy” by Samuel Warren and Louis D. Brandeis, 4 Harvard L. Rev. 193 (1890) (reprinted by University of Louisville)
UPDATE: Shortly after I posted this story, MSNBC ran a related story about privacy and Facebook, Google and Twitter. Can legislation and precedent help address this issue or is amendment needed? General protection for privacy or specific protections?
~Submitted by Gene Howington, Guest Blogger
AY,
That’s not exactly what I pointed out, but based on your response in toto, I’ll mark you down in the “Amendment needed” column.
Have you ever considered pointing out and doing what is right rather than living with and doing nothing what is wrong?
The right to privacy is not absolute….. it is expanded and contracted as the government sees fit. I believe Scalia has stated this summary….
Gene….in the spirit and realm of this thread that is a factual statement….there is no federal right to privacy enumerated in the declaration of independence, the bill of rights or anything codified by federal statues….the only protections that anyone has is based upon the common law and court decisions binding on a state or the states as a whole if a decision is rendered by the us sct…..
As you have pointed out the only ones having any degree of protection are the bankers and other special interest people or corporation…..
“Thus inalienable rights are retained by the individual, by definition, during the formation of the social compact. … And in a nut shell, that’s where you find the right of privacy; existing as a ‘stick in the bundle’ of rights known as self ownership. (see Kaiser v. Aetna for the metaphor).” (Bob)
Could I stretch that point to suggest that, outside the boundaries of criminal indictment, public records such as birth, death, marriage certificates etc. I own my content? That no matter what the delivery system involved (news mongers, healthcare systems, government records, internet, tape recorders, neighborhood gossip, etc.) the right to my privacy is based on the fact that I, and I alone, own the content of my life and thus can permit or deny its use?
Bob,
I will stipulate I should have used the word “recognizes” (as I did in the rest of the article) instead of “creates” for indeed, as you point out, I do know the difference. I’ll make the change.
Gene,
That’s one of the most interesting articles I’ve read on this blog for a long time.
I’ll try and comment more later but for now I’ll just say this:
You said: “The 9th Amendment arguably creates a general right to privacy.”
I spent my entire third year of law school proving the opposite; i.e. that Goldberg’s conclusion in Griswold was correct but his reasoning was wrong. Also Griswold was not a Ninth Amendment case, the plurality signed on to the penumbra reasoning of Douglas.
As you know, the constitution does not create or confer any rights whatsoever; rights confer power, not vice versa. This was the whole (obvious) point Hamilton spelled out in Fed 84.
Why do we distinguish between alienable rights and inalienable rights? Because failure to do so renders the social contract illusory; paving the way to tyranny.
Thus the distinction goes “AS usurpation is the exercise of power, which another hath a right to; so tyranny is the exercise of power beyond right, which no body can have a right to.”
While exercising power over an alienable right may be usurpation, the exercise of power over an inalienable right is tyranny per se. Thus distinction is made and thereby making the social contract valid.
The right of privacy can be extracted analytically through an examination of the social contract; viz rights that cannot be alienated must be retained.
Thus inalienable rights are retained by the individual, by definition, during the formation of the social compact.
And what is the first and foremost inalienable right in natural law? What’s that one inalienable right that is the foundation for all property law?
“Though the earth, and all inferior creatures, be common to all…, yet every [one] has a property in his own person: this no body has any right to but himself.”
And in a nut shell, that’s where you find the right of privacy; existing as a “stick in the bundle” of rights known as self ownership. (see Kaiser v. Aetna for the metaphor).
Per the ‘right to be forgotten’ — honestly, at first blush the second and third circumstances you described seem completely ridiculous.
If you toss a pebble in a pond then you invite all the ripples it creates.
And that’s my two cents for now.
The question of whether to enumerate or not enumerate WAS the question. That is why the Bill of Rights were added. The Ninth and Tenth were the catch-alls–the Ninth articulates that rights not enumerated as belonging to the people are nevertheless retained; the Tenth says the same thing vis a vis the Fed government vs the states. The 14th Amdt goes a lot further and did not get enough mention in the article. The 14th makes everyone a citizen–not just the Freedman but also the yeoman poor white guy. The Southern Strategy of the Republican Party has been the blueprint since Nixon and Reagan. The tactic is to use code words instead of overt racial denigrations to rally the poor white trash against the African American and fool the white bigot to rally with the likes of big business. Rick Perry was good at it. A guy like Santo Rum wants to rail about Obamacare and forget that he and his brood are thriving off of Congresscare (free health care for life if you were in Congress).
There is some reference in this article to the notion or doctrine of States Rights. The States Rights wordage is employed often by bigots who wish to discriminate and then complain about something like a federal interference in their bigotry. As in the form of the Justice Department forcing Governor Faubus to integrate the school. In the federtal Constitution the federal government and the state governments have Powers. Individual people have Rights. It is not as attractive for Billy Bob to cite States Powers when complaining about the Justice Department infringing on the Klans lynchings. Governor Perry was off on this States Rights harangue in his recent campaign.
The notion that we could create a right to our anonymity by forcing U Tube to erase a video we sent out when we were ten is novel. Lets let the Europeans experiment.
We dogs dont like Dog of the Week. Often photos dont flatter dogs.
That’s me above at 7:01.
I wonder if the recently signed legislation vastly expanding the “right” to fly drones — public or private — over our land figures in here. Or, via high resolution satellites, DEA overflights, etc., whether that “right” to privacy in our backyards, from an aerial perspective, was lost a long time ago?
Somehow it seems that the word “drone” would have set off a firestorm of protest. Or maybe it is that we have become inured to the idea and naturally trust (snark alert) that only bad guys could have any concern. They sure slipped this one in quietly.
Appreciate the thoroughly presentation, Gene. Great research. (Better you than me ; )
Great article Gene. I think the case by case method would be best. We need leeway for future tech advances.
“Then the posts of others is correct on this topic. The corporate laws do not apply to the right of personal privacy.”
Argument by non-sequitur and fallacy of simple cause. Corporate influenced laws may indeed negatively impact your rights (and not just to privacy). It’s a separate (but related) discussion to the idea of protecting a right by specific legislation and/or amendment (with varying degrees of specificity) versus allowing precedent and piecemeal regulation define a nebulously held but recognized right on a case by case basis.
Then the posts of others is correct on this topic. The corporate laws do not apply to the right of personal privacy.
Donald L. Anderson,
The question isn’t whether we have a right to privacy – we do. The topic is rather how to best protect the right of privacy moving forward, be that from fascist corporate intrusion or simply misadventure. It’s a discussion that is relevant to shining light on the issue of protecting our eroding rights in general.
***********
Ing Law,
The subject of corporatism and the corruption it engenders is an entirely separate discussion. I’d suggest searching this blog and the Internet for “Citizens United v. FEC”, “campaign finance reform”, “FECA” (the partially repealed Federal Election Campaign Act), and “Buckley v. Valeo” to get a grip on the complex of laws you are concerned with.
*************
Thanks, CEJ!
Add a right?
The rights we used to have are being taken away by this Fascistic government.
Sorry, but I have little hope …
“An additional effect of corporate dominance in government is the spending of trillions of dollars in foreign military bases and wars, a signature product of the military-industrial complex. This octopus of secret power has been in operation since America nuked Japan in August 1945. The military-industrial complex or national security state is behind every policy. But, curiously, not many politicians, journalists and academics question the black hole of the Pentagon in swallowing most of the budget of the country, leaving trinkets only for environmental and social programs.”
— E. Vallianatos
Gene,
Thank-you for this post; excellent work!
Having been introduced today to natural law vs positive law; means vs intent; it would seem that identity theft etc is independent of means.
Identity or personal information is always at risk, even for hermits.
This is a discussion over my kin. Watching appreciatively.
The right to be left alone? really? Had humans the right to be left alone nudity would not be indecent, jails would not exist, a furry could put what
his yiffing heart wanted on his furry suit, and what he- she did not want on his furry suit. Nudity would be a common sight even as the nude leaves of a tree. Humans would leave them alone, and not persecute them.
All furry art cpould be freely seen by all too. What we see in realliity is the paradigm shit of humans being left alone.
The right to be left alone? really? Had humans the right to be left alone nudity would not be indecent, jails would not exist, a furry could put what
his yiffing heart wanted on his furry suit, and what he- she did not want on his furry suit. Nudity would be a common sight even as the nude leaves of a tree. Humans would leave them alone, and not persecute them.
All furry art cpould be freely seen by ball too. .What we see in realliity is the paradigm shit of humans being left alone.
“There are no federal regulations or codes that regulate the internet…”
Actually there are, but they mostly relate to wire fraud and data theft, not privacy of personal information.
It appears that special interest groups with there special lobbyist always get special attention and treatment from the rest of the people that make up the 99 percent.
Would you please post the appropriate link to the laws that differentiate the monied from the ones that have to work for a living.
There are no federal regulations or codes that regulate the internet….. There are some states individually that make certain action or revelation of certain information on the internet, cyber space a state criminal or civil offense….. Texas is one of them….