On Sun, Aug 26, 2012 at 11:37:01PM +0200, Stan Tobias wrote: [snip] > What I mean to say above, is that weapons are anti-social, they don't > build trust; and there are better means, other than guns, to maintain > peace. Encryption is a weapon. I believe there are many valid reasons > to use it, especially to protect other people. It might buy you some > safety for a period of time, but it won't bring you Freedom. You don't > get more Privacy by encrypting your messages. If you _have to_ encrypt, > you're on the losing side.
I was following along, nodding in general agreement, right up to there. I feel that a weapon, or encryption, is a tool. Tools per se have no social context; it is our actions, with or without tools, which attach social context. Using a weapon (whether it is a firearm, a pillow, or a hunk of software) in a way not generally accepted is antisocial. (Aside: if you believe that lots of the people outside your home are armed, and you go out anyway, that shows a lot of trust. Almost anyone could kill you, but they don't. There's an agreement that weapons be used only in certain contexts: see how riled up people get when someone violates such an agreement. The trust doesn't come from the weapons; it is generated by the behavior of those who bear them, and the penalties for violation of such trust are severe.) I use encryption to enforce the privacy I already (should) have. So, yes, it's a weapon. There are people who don't respect my privacy, and if I don't defend it they may take it away. Even if someone penetrates my encryption, if I can show that he did so I may be able to win a case against him in court, so it's (potentially) both a passive and an active defense, a shield for my privacy and an assertion that I will defend that privacy. That said, most of the time I don't encrypt because what I say is not something I consider private. When I do consider something private, I'd like to be able to communicate it electronically without fear that someone I don't trust may be eavesdropping. I could argue that it would be antisocial for someone to insist that people not enforce their privacy. We do not and should not trust all equally in all situations. Anyone may have lawful, moral business, the disclosure of which would be so harmful (in his eyes) that he might want assurance that only the intended recipient be party to the discussion. I doubt there ever was anyone who had *nothing* to hide. -- Mark H. Wood, Lead System Programmer [email protected] Asking whether markets are efficient is like asking whether people are smart.
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