The point about the "nothing to hide" fallacy, as others better qualified than 
me have pointed out, is not that people might not care if their static images, 
CSS and JavaScript are loaded in clear, but the fact that in a "nothing to 
hide, nothing to fear" society, the individual does not get to choose what is 
"acceptable" and what leads to chilling effects, curtailment of liberties, or 
even punitive sanctions.

Daniel Solove has written persuasively about the pernicious harms of NTHNTF, 
but he is "just" a trailblazer. We should never lose sight of the fact that we 
are in the infancy of understanding the effects of Total Informational 
Awareness on social norms, social behaviour, and social outcomes. I think we 
should have the level-headedness to acknowledge that, when it has occurred in 
the past, in pre-digital societies, massive informational awareness has, more 
often than not, been abused, with harmful social consequences.

R

Robin Wilton

Technical Outreach Director - Identity and Privacy

On 6 Dec 2013, at 19:19, Bruce Perens <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 12/06/2013 10:58 AM, Nicholas Weaver wrote:
>> Include a checkbox in the browser saying "Fuck it all, show my data to the 
>> world" which broadcasts the session key in the clear.
> I know you intended this to be sarcastic, but opting out of the concealment 
> society does not mean that the user doesn't have the sense to conceal things 
> when it is actually necessary, vs. when it is in their honest opinion an 
> off-the-scale response to the problem.
> 
> Punishing them by revealing their credit card numbers is not an appropriate 
> response to their wanting to load static images, javascripts, and CSS in the 
> clear.
> 
>     Thanks
> 
>     Bruce
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