Doug, 

 

This is exactly the problem.  Am I to become an agency of punishment?  Am I
to become a vector of Evil?  Choose One. Quickly, please.   Has anybody read
the Scarlet Letter recently?  N

 

 

 

 

 

From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Douglas Roberts
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2013 10:37 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Privacy vs Open Public Data

 

I recently accidentally discovered that a musician friend of mine was a
registered sex offender of little girls.  I discovered this while using
Google to find his phone number to arrange a gig.

 

Talk about feeling conflicted.

 

--Doug

 

On Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 10:34 AM, Nicholas Thompson
<[email protected]> wrote:

Marcus, 

 

Have a look in the new New Yorker about the article on the new civil
commitment laws re sexual deviants.  

 

I can both not want these folks living down the block AND be horrified by
what We The People are doing to them.  It is the luxury of liberalism to be
ambivalent.  

 

It's all very VERY hard. 

 

Nick 

 

From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marcus G.
Daniels
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2013 1:36 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Privacy vs Open Public Data

 

On 1/15/13 10:54 PM, Steve Smith wrote:

Who do we become when we do not respect the boundaries of others?  Who are
we as a society when we allow or encourage others to transgress? I
understand the arguments for Law Enforcement and Intelligence and Security
*wanting* to spy on people freely...  to restrict the use of cryptography,
etc.  but they don't outweigh the risk of who we become when we do these
things.  

When a person visits the doctor, information shared is privileged.   If the
doctor does not treat it as such, the doctor's career is put at risk.  It's
a good incentive to keep quiet.

So imagine a world in which brain scans become much more sophisticated, and
that certain dangerous mental health problems could be diagnosed with high
accuracy, and also treated.   Because of fear of mass shootings, etc.,
Americans make it law that scans be done on all, and that appropriate
treatments be employed.  For the sake of argument, suppose it's all handled
methodically and in a secure fashion.

Should we expect that the therapists and psychiatrists involved in this
hypothetical process would suffer themselves for not respecting boundaries
of individuals' psychological spaces?  In current practice they would be
invited inside the boundary by the patient and so presumably that's
different.  I think it is an adjustment health providers would make without
much trouble.  It would be a professional analytical activity.

Marcus


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-- 
Doug Roberts
[email protected]
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