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Are you more concerned with government surveillance, or private data-mining?

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  • Are you more concerned with government surveillance, or private data-mining?

    Since Google's new privacy policy is effective today, let's discuss this.

    Foucault once made an extremely valid and fruitful point: since the primary function of governments is to enforce property rights, the government is effectively competing with private interests selling the same "services". Case in point, the first police forces in London behaved in a similar way to private insurance (and private firefighter services), until they were "nationalized".

    Let's compare to the current situation using the following axioms.

    1) Developed economies have evolved from primary, then secondary and finally tertiary activity
    2) It would then follow that the most valuable productive capital is neither fertile land, nor manufacturing facilities, but the actual ability to contract with tertiary sector workforce.
    3) The best way to benefit from a contract is to withhold information while receiving one's consent, unless otherwise prohibited by law to do so.
    4) It would then mean we are seeing a competition over enforcement of property between government and some corporations, a competition exhibited by the whole legal grey area and changes in privacy policies.

    Whomever wins will be the next "government", but very possibly in a form that we would not traditionally consider one.

    Who is going to win?
    In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

  • #2
    What property is Google protecting by watching our activities?

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    • #3
      All data mining without expressed consent violates the right to privacy. No matter if it is government or private.

      google is no longer my preferred search engine and I will have nearly all my profiles poinying to a non-gmail address before the week is out.
      "I am sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and you disagree with this administration somehow you're not patriotic. We should stand up and say we are Americans and we have a right to debate and disagree with any administration." - Hillary Clinton, 2003

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      • #4
        I think it's taking the theory too far. Despite the economic movement towards information and service economy, the core of property rights remain the right to safe person and physical property. Despite the example you used of the London police of years back, we are never going to return to that kind of model for the very reason it became obsolete in the first place. You're quite right that because of the amorphous nature of information, enforcement of rights there has become a very grey area but I'd expect it to remain so rather than to eventually fall under the remit of either government or private interests. At the core of government however remains physical rights, and those aren't likely to change any time soon.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by PLATO View Post
          All data mining without expressed consent violates the right to privacy. No matter if it is government or private.
          What determines that right?

          JM
          Jon Miller-
          I AM.CANADIAN
          GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.

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          • #6
            Roe v. Wade.
            No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

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            • #7
              Hah. That was going to be my post.
              Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
              "We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld

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              • #8
                Also, I don't think the government really competes with the private sector. London doesn't have private police and firefighters any more because London residents are being forced to pay for public police and firefighters.

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                • #9
                  Of course, I don't know how it would impact London. :\
                  No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by gribbler View Post
                    London doesn't have private police and firefighters any more because London residents are being forced to pay for public police and firefighters.
                    Don't worry, they genuinely don't mind.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by gribbler View Post
                      Also, I don't think the government really competes with the private sector. London doesn't have private police and firefighters any more because London residents are being forced to pay for public police and firefighters.
                      I am disappointed that you and others seem to be missing the point, so let me word it differently.

                      There is no other way to define the right to property than by saying something along the lines of "the right to property is the ability to enjoy its benefits, i.e., absent this ability, absent is the right."

                      By that definition, in a tertiary economy, a contract for a given service most closely corresponds to the definition, since the contract, implicit or explicit, corresponds to this ability.

                      Assuming a relatively high level of rule of law in modern liberal democracies, then, the closest thing to "enforcement" of property rights becomes your own skill at getting one's consent.

                      I will define "information discrepancy" as a major component of this skill/ability.

                      This would in turn mean that competent data miners, at some point will be, in a derived way, "property rights enforcers".
                      In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Oncle Boris View Post
                        I am disappointed that you and others seem to be missing the point, so let me word it differently.

                        There is no other way to define the right to property than by saying something along the lines of "the right to property is the ability to enjoy its benefits, i.e., absent this ability, absent is the right."

                        By that definition, in a tertiary economy, a contract for a given service most closely corresponds to the definition, since the contract, implicit or explicit, corresponds to this ability.

                        Assuming a relatively high level of rule of law in modern liberal democracies, then, the closest thing to "enforcement" of property rights becomes your own skill at getting one's consent.

                        I will define "information discrepancy" as a major component of this skill/ability.

                        This would in turn mean that competent data miners, at some point will be, in a derived way, "property rights enforcers".
                        Your definition is a bad one. The right to property is being entitled to enjoy its benefits, not simply having the ability to benefit from something. Skill at getting someone's consent does not make them your property.

                        I don't see how Google's large stash of information makes it a "property rights enforcer" like a private police force.
                        Last edited by giblets; March 1, 2012, 11:43.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by gribbler View Post
                          Your definition is a bad one. The right to property is being entitled to enjoy its benefits, not simply having the ability to benefit from something. Skill at getting someone's consent does not make them your property.

                          I don't see how Google's large stash of information makes it a "property rights enforcer" like a private police force.
                          1) You don't understand what a right is. Not that your definition doesn't exist, but it's plain wrong.
                          2) Nothing in what I said implies that people are your property. People are not your property, but the labor you buy from them is.
                          In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by kentonio View Post
                            I think it's taking the theory too far. Despite the economic movement towards information and service economy, the core of property rights remain the right to safe person and physical property. Despite the example you used of the London police of years back, we are never going to return to that kind of model for the very reason it became obsolete in the first place. You're quite right that because of the amorphous nature of information, enforcement of rights there has become a very grey area but I'd expect it to remain so rather than to eventually fall under the remit of either government or private interests. At the core of government however remains physical rights, and those aren't likely to change any time soon.
                            I feel this is the strongest objection to my theory. My hypothesis is that under rule of law, physical safety becomes a secondary concern that paves way for more refined conceptions. As such, the truth of my thesis would shatter with a real-world collapse of the system.
                            In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Oncle Boris View Post
                              1) You don't understand what a right is. Not that your definition doesn't exist, but it's plain wrong.
                              2) Nothing in what I said implies that people are your property. People are not your property, but the labor you buy from them is.
                              You don't understand the difference between a right and a mere privilege. You also haven't explained how Google's large bank of information makes it a rival of the government...

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