Watching them watching you

Watching them watching you

Postby Antonio Esquivel » Tue Nov 27, 2007 6:36 am

There are sites on the internet for people worried about surveillance (being watched)

I found this information...

The Surveillance Society

Privacy has been called "the civil rights issue of the information age."
Americans enjoy unlimited benefits from new technologies in a wired world. But those wires send information in two directions, and the access to our personal data has never been more open for abuse. It's not the just the Internet that erodes our privacy. In dozens, possibly hundreds, of every-day activities, you leave a trail of who you are. As technology brings us closer together, the fragments of information about you are becoming much easier to piece together, revealing the most intimate details of your life.

Documents:

The right to be left alone

When the U.S. Supreme Court and Congress have taken privacy into consideration, it has usually lost out to other interests.

The price of privacy

Americans have been rewarded for giving up their personal privacy. In a society where the rights of the many outweigh the rights of the few, a more-secure and safer America has emerged.

Privacy the European Way

The European Union's "Privacy Directive" provides a model for how the United States might protect the online privacy of Americans.

Desktop Monitors

Many employers say existing laws are forcing them to monitor the activities of their employees.

Medical Records: Open Files

Medical records may be the most private of personal data. That's why so many people want yours.

Your National ID Number

When the Federal government started issuing Social Security cards five decades ago, some people worried the Social Security number would evolve into an all-purpose, national identification system. They were right.

Identify Theft

t's remarkably easy for someone to steal your identity, and it's difficult to get it back. It's a growing crime that law-enforcement agencies are unwilling or unprepared to stop it.

http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/f ... m_privacy/
Antonio Esquivel
 

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