By John Stossel
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Scarlett Johansson left nude photos of herself on her
computer. A hacker grabbed them and sent them to gossip websites.
A Pennsylvania high school issued laptop computers to
students and then remotely activated the laptops' cameras to watch the students
when they were away from school.
On my computer, a program called Disconnect reveals that
my favorite websites spy on me and track what I like to read, what I browse,
what I buy.
Privacy is almost a thing of the past.
As I explain on my show this week, I follow the advice of
"experts." I buy anti-virus software (today a virus is more likely to
steal your credit card and bank info than harm your computer). I sometimes
change passwords. But someone still might steal my data.
I'm told I should be upset about this. But I'm not.
Already, I voluntarily give up privacy. Amazon has my credit card info.
Facebook, Google, Reason.org, Cato.org etc., know my preferences.
I resent that websites demand I click "agree"
to say that I've read their complex terms and conditions. (I click
"agree," but no one reads them.)
By comparison, the National Security Agency's data mining
seems relatively benign. They just gather patterns of phone numbers. They say
they don't listen to my calls or know my name. Do we trust them?
But the distinction we care about shouldn't be whether
they know my name. The important difference is whether what you do is
voluntary.
You can decide whether to use Facebook or let private
sites install cookies to track your info. Johansson didn't give that hacker
permission to steal her photos. And I didn't give the NSA -- not to mention the
IRS, FBI, etc. -- permission to access my information.
Sometimes people say that sharing information with Amazon
or Facebook is just as involuntary, but the truth is that we're just too lazy
to check their privacy policies.
And there's a good, rational reason we don't worry so
much about companies: Even if they get ahold of my embarrassing information,
all they can do with it is try to sell us things.
Amazon's not going to raid your home with a SWAT team the
way government might if it gets the wrong impression from your emails. Facebook
can't forcibly take my money or put me in jail.
Because of the Internet, I changed my behavior years ago.
I try not to email anything too embarrassing. I'm aware that when I surf the
Web, someone might watch. And if you find out what I like to do on the weekend,
what medications I take or that I have seen a psychotherapist, so what? I'm not
ashamed. Losing some privacy is a price I'll pay for progress.
But here's the thing: With all the private, voluntary
transactions, I can at least decide whether the risk is worth it. I don't get
to make that calculation when government decides it wants to know more about
me.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Agency wants black
box recorders to be mandatory in all cars. The bureaucrats say they need to
keep track of how we drive and where we go -- but not to spy on us, they say.
They promise they won't tell anyone that you see a
psychologist or go to Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. They just want your travel
pattern in order to know where to build the next highway, add mass transit and
so on. And if you are in an accident, the black box may reveal important
information about who is at fault. Maybe the other guy was speeding. Now the
lawyers will have more information.
And don't we trust the government?
No, not always.
But we don't place an infinite value on privacy.
Sometimes we're willing to give up some of it -- to friends, doctors, companies
with whom we want to do business. What we really value is the freedom to choose
when we'll do that and when we'll tell people to butt out.
We can never tell government to butt out.
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