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Privacy in an Age of Terabytes and Terror; September 2008; Scientific American Magazine; by Peter Brown; 2 Page(s) A cold wind is blowing across the landscape of privacy. The twin imperatives of technological advancement and counterterrorism have led to dramatic and possibly irreversible changes in what people can expect to remain of private life. Nearly 10 years ago Scott McNealy of Sun Microsystems famously pronounced the death of privacy. ¿Get over it,¿ he said. Some people, primarily those younger than about 25, claim to have done just that, embracing its antithesis, total public disclosure. And of course in many cases¿determining the whereabouts of a terrorist or the carrier of a disease¿public interest has an overwhelming claim on information that is usually private. Yet in many contexts¿banking, commerce, diplomacy, medicine¿private communications are essential. The founding fathers of the Republic put great stock in personal privacy; privacy is embodied (though, as we are often reminded, not stated) in the Bill of Rights. In her keynote essay Esther Dyson clarifies what ¿privacy¿ means by reminding us what it is not (page 50): several important issues commonly labeled dilemmas of privacy are better understood as issues of security, health policy, insurance or self-presentation.
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