by bagpiper on Thu 17 May 2012 5:15 pm
How do I feel?
Just like I do about a lot of technology in the hands of government: Some good may come of it. But it is likely to change the nature of our relationship with the government.
There is no right to violate the law. There is no right to go unnoticed violating the law in public. And I support obeying the law. In fact, while hard on those who are prosecuted, I believe one way to get bad laws repealed is to demand 100% enforcement. When the powers-that-be are prosecuted under the laws, or enough voters are, the laws will be changed.
That all said, I don't care to live in a police state where every little infraction can be 100%, immediately ticketed. There is something to be said for there being some finite cost of enforcement.
I recently read an interesting article on privacy that asserted our privacy laws are (and always have) lagging technology. In the 18th century, physical security (being secure in your person, papers, effects, and homes) guaranteed privacy. Today, physical access to your home or person is not needed to invade your privacy. So much personal information is, of necessity or convenience, gathered and stored electronically that the question is no longer about getting access to our personal data, but rather about the purposes for which it can be used.
Now, that said, I think the notion of some golden era of privacy is a myth. In small towns everyone knows when you sneeze and I suspect that was quite true in the ante-bellum period as well. It was common and accepted that most any citizen in a town could stop a stranger and demand he make an accounting for himself. Probably most often done in a polite manner at least for those who were dressed and comported such as to be entitled to politeness.
But certainly the nature of privacy changes. A man on 1,000 acres enjoys great physical privacy and seems to have close relations with his neighbors a mile down the road. A man living in a Condo hears way too much through the walls and so avoids even knowing the names of his neighbors on the other side of the wall.
None of us want to get a ticket for being three days expired on our registration or driving with the flow of traffic faster than a speed limited posted too low for the total conditions. So electronic toll collections don't get used to enforce those laws so far as I know. But most of us don't like the idea of serious criminals getting off, so I wonder if electronic toll collection system actually get used in murder or other serious cases as we sometimes see on TV.
When my car is stolen, I'd love to have the police be able to track it down and recover it for me. When the car isn't stolen, I'd just as soon it not be trackable.
I think the key is not to oppose technology, but to properly legislate its use by the government. And part of that is proper penalties for both agencies and their employees who violate the limits. For that matter, much as I generally dislike government intrusion into the market, There may well be some areas where government limits on what personal data can be gathered, used, and shared, are needed.
Charles