The Incomplete Cynic
Among the most deliberate and abhorrent mass violations of privacy committed in recent memory did not come as a result of technology, social services, databases, hackers, thieves, leakers, or governments. It was an act of a news organization, News Corp., which hacked into the phones of a reported 4,000 people, including not just celebrities but dead children and the families of the victims of terrorism and war.
Power corrupts.
The oh-so-rich irony is that this comes from the same company that, through its Wall Street Journal, fancies itself the protector of our privacy. The Journal would have us believe that web sites, technology companies, advertisers, and retailers are the enemies of privacy. No, it was their own corporate colleagues, their fellow journalists.
The solution to this threat to privacy is not to change technology or even the law. It is to enforce the laws, norms, and mores that already exist and hold to account the criminals and those responsible for their actions. That is, the managers of News Corp. That is, the Murdoch family.
This is not a matter of technology but of corruption.
”Jeff Jarvis: A Real Threat to Privacy
I’m amazed that this guy is able to support himself by writing. Grammatically, stylistically, and logically, this article is a giant fail whale.
“Power Corrupts”,”oh-so-rich irony”—back to back? Then, in the course of five sentences, he says both that the “managers of News Corp” and the Murdoch family are responsible, and that only a “small number of the [News of the World]’s employees was responsible”. Which is it?
This article is priceless entertainment, especially when combined with the derangement of its partner-in-crazy: “American Sins: Less Sensational, But More Dangerous”.
Please enjoy…
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holeycynicism posted this