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xane
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- #31
Originally posted by Sar
I don't break the law either (rare mp3 downloads aside), but that's not why I'm fucked off at A.N. Other agency getting access to my private data - it's the same reason I'd get pissed off at some stranger sitting reading my newspaper over my shoulder on the bus or similar, I'm entitled to my own private space and time, and what I do on the net, unless it's breaking the law (peddling kiddy porn for instance), is my own business and no-one elses.
If people choose to do things in public, then why get so upset that such events are broadcast ?
Reading a newspaper on the train is actually a good example, its a fallacy to insist that you should get privacy when you conduct business in front of everyone.
The internet is no different, it was designed from the outset to be a public service.
The biggest scare is people reading your "private" information without your knowledge, similar to using binoculars from the the other end of the train carraige to read your paper. But any public environment is open to that risk, and its a risk you have to accept.
Any one of the above agencies can read my e-mail, I don't care, all the important ones I will encrypt, if they want the key they'll have to go to a judge for the warrant and then ask me, and then I'll know what they are up to
If you are fool enough to put private correspondance onto a public information service then don't expect any agency, or indeed any individual, to respect that.
One thing we are all forgetting is that ISPs already have all your e-mails safely tucked away somewhere, and most of your e-mails or other traffic pass through some foreign servers which could be tracking them too, so its rather daft to get frightened of government agencies having access.