I think information, such as what is the PIN to my bank account, or the password to my LessWrong.com account, should not be freely accessible.
You make a good point; I didn’t phrase my original statement as well as I should have. What I meant was that there shouldn’t be any laws (within the limits mentioned in my original post) preventing people or companies from using, storing and passing on information. I didn’t mean to imply keeping secrets should be illegal. If a person or company wants to keep something secret, and can manage to do so in practice, that should be perfectly legal as well.
As a special case, using encryption and keeping the keys to yourself should be a fundamental right, and doing so shouldn’t lead to e.g. a presumption of guilt in a legal case.
You don’t believe there is value in anonymity? E.g. being able to criticize an oppressive government, without fear of retribution from said government?
I believe there can be value in anonymity, but the way to achieve it is by effectively keeping a secret either through technological means or by communicating through trusted associates. If doing so is infeasible without laws on use of information, I don’t think laws would help, either.
I think governments that would like to be oppressive have significantly more to fear from free information use than their citizens do.
When you use the PIN to your bank account you expect both the bank and ATM technicians and programmers to respect your secret. There are laws that either force them not to remember the PIN or impose punishment for misusing their position of trust.
I don’t see how such situations or cases of blackmail would be resolved without assuming one person’s right to have their secrets not made public by others.
I’m not just nitpicking. I would love to see a watertight argument against communication perversions. Have you written anything on the topic?
You make a good point; I didn’t phrase my original statement as well as I should have. What I meant was that there shouldn’t be any laws (within the limits mentioned in my original post) preventing people or companies from using, storing and passing on information. I didn’t mean to imply keeping secrets should be illegal. If a person or company wants to keep something secret, and can manage to do so in practice, that should be perfectly legal as well.
As a special case, using encryption and keeping the keys to yourself should be a fundamental right, and doing so shouldn’t lead to e.g. a presumption of guilt in a legal case.
I believe there can be value in anonymity, but the way to achieve it is by effectively keeping a secret either through technological means or by communicating through trusted associates. If doing so is infeasible without laws on use of information, I don’t think laws would help, either.
I think governments that would like to be oppressive have significantly more to fear from free information use than their citizens do.
When you use the PIN to your bank account you expect both the bank and ATM technicians and programmers to respect your secret. There are laws that either force them not to remember the PIN or impose punishment for misusing their position of trust. I don’t see how such situations or cases of blackmail would be resolved without assuming one person’s right to have their secrets not made public by others.
I’m not just nitpicking. I would love to see a watertight argument against communication perversions. Have you written anything on the topic?