Privacy

Nowhere -- and No Way -- to Hide

Privacy doesn't mean anonymity. Think about that for a bit -- and get used to it.

Or if you don't like it, get a plan. But it had better be a good one.

On Oct. 23, Donald Kerr, deputy director of the Office of National Intelligence, outlined the new order of things: "Too often, privacy has been equated with anonymity; and it's an idea that is deeply rooted in American culture." Well, yes, the Bill of Rights, for instance, includes protections against… more

James Pinkerton | November 13, 2007 | Newsday

Scarlet Letters, Digitized

Did you see that YouTube video of an Australian priest hurling abuse at a motley crew of skateboarders in front of Melbourne’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral? Well, his superiors did, and last week the Rev. Mgr. Geoff Baron was placed on indefinite leave.

And what about the famous, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist’s cringe-making "personal" e-mail about his wife leaving him for Ted Turner? Gawker highlighted it last week with this in the precede: "insane insane INSANE."

Heck, you might say, they had it coming.… more

A Card We Should All Carry

As states get ready to comply with a law passed last May and roll out Real IDs (think 50 flavors of enhanced drivers' licenses that will also, for lack of anything more suitable, regulate access to airplanes, bars and banks), it might be time to consider a national identification card. Unfortunately, two camps own the conversation.

Security heavies and cultural conservatives say a national ID is necessary to protect us from Islamic terrorists and illegal immigrants. Libertarians and government-wary leftists… more

Douglas McGray | February 21, 2006 | The New York Times

From Typhoid Mary to Diabetic Debbie

On Jan. 15, New York City began requiring local clinical laboratories to report to the city health department the results of blood sugar tests performed on citizens. The department plans to use the information to improve surveillance for diabetes, which afflicts an estimated one out of eight New Yorkers and to "target interventions." Specifically, if you live in New York and have trouble resisting sweets, your doctor may soon receive a call from the health department suggesting that he or… more

Phillip Longman | February 15, 2006 | The Washington Post

We'll Just Shoot First, Ask Questions Later

Did you hear about the government's new plan to launch anticipatory strikes against evildoers?

No, not President George W. Bush's policy, announced on June 1, of "preemptive action when necessary to defend our liberty and to defend our lives." That's old news. Now it's time to look ahead, to "Minority Report," the new Steven Spielberg movie, which offers a window into the dystopic future when government power is taken to extremes. If the film scares you, remember, it isn't… more

James Pinkerton | June 19, 2002 | Newsday

From Russia with Lopht

Had Alexey Vladimirovich Ivanov been born in Chicago rather than Chelyabinsk, he'd likely be well on his way to joining the geek elite. His three-page resume lists computer skills that would dazzle any Silicon Valley headhunter. According to his employment history, Ivanov began working at a regional telephone company in Russia while still in his mid-teens, installing Web servers and Cisco routers. His programming talents include tricky languages like C++ and Perl, and he has mastered 18… more

Brendan I. Koerner | April 30, 2002 | Legal Affairs

The Unwanted Gaze

The Digital Age has brought abundance to the connected, but one commodity is growing perilously scarce: privacy. The Internet and other information technologies have made sensitive information about individuals' private lives available to employers, vendors, government authorities -- to anyone, in fact, with the right knowledge and a little money. In his new book, Jeffrey Rosen argues that legal, technological, and cultural changes undermine an individual's ability to control how much personal information is communicated to others, and he proposes… more

05/31/2000 - 12:30pm
05/31/2000 - 2:00pm

The Unwanted Gaze

I just did a search on Google. I've left Yahoo because Google works faster in searches, and Jeffrey Rosen, when you plug in his name, has 12,493 citations. Now, they are not all the same Jeffrey Rosen; I've found there were sort of two or three others. But they are quite interesting. If any of you read Jeff's front cover of The New York Times Magazine story recently… more

May 30, 2000

The New Politics

Several years ago I was driving cross-country from Washington to Berkeley. My D.C. license plates inevitably sparked interesting political discussions along the way, especially … more

Don't Tread on Freedom

Attorney General Janet Reno and FBI Director Louis Freeh lobbied Congress yesterday to expand the federal role in the battle against Internet crime. The Clinton administration … more