Zonie63 -> RE: Trouble with the EU (7/1/2013 7:33:04 AM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Edwynn What I find amusing is that some of the people on this forum who ridiculed those who took issue with grandma being strip searched at the airport (which had everything to do with pork to the company making the 'I can see through your bra and panties' machines, and nothing to do with security) are the same who start posts to vent their righteous indignation at this 'atrocity.' And that all these 'community watchdogs' in any case seem to be blythey unaware that the phone companies, the internet, the search engine companies, the browsers, the servers, the vendors, the 'social network' sites, etc. not only track everything you do, but make a ton of money off of it. Perhaps if the NSA or CIA (or MI6, or the Mossad, etc.) sold all this information to advertizers, or if they strip searched your or a friend's grandmother in the process, we might assume it would be more acceptable. I've been through one of those "I can see you" x-ray machines at the airport. Not everyone had to go through it; they were just picking people at random, so I was one of the lucky ones. Maybe the TSA workers wanted a cheap thrill. I've never been all that concerned about this on a personal level. I accept that the government spies on people, both foreign and domestic, as well as corporate spying, independent hackers, and just plain nosy neighbors. (It's the nosy neighbors who actually bug me the most.) But the bigger problem is in what government employees are actually doing with the information? Of course, we can concede that there is always spying and that's what governments do. But what if they find information that's not incriminating or a national security threat, but damaging nonetheless? What if the government finds evidence that a major CEO cheating on his wife, and goes to him and says, "Either play ball with us, or we send this evidence to your wife"? What if it's used for political reasons, to discredit political dissent? Hoover hounded MLK and others for a long time.
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