loveofreason
echoes through time
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- Joined
- Sep 8, 2007
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OK, so this is a petition link:
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/stop_prism_fb_b/?csICfcb
I wouldn't normally post this kind of thing - I don't really find appropriate - but in this case, the principle at stake is so high, I'm putting it out there.
Now, what any administration thinks it can do with mountains of inane data is kind of curious. Data-mining for social trends in marketing and general public opinion is probably more fruitful than catching any lone nutter. And the "voluminous wastes of our minds" that end up creating the oceans (wait, are they oceans? Are they mountains? Are they made of cheese?) of data out there are hardly unique, but being part of a pattern; an era, is inevitable and amusing.
But the secrecy and manner in which such data is collected, and the way in which the US treats anyone with a spine to stand up and expose things like PRISM, are worth protesting. I think.
Of course opinions vary, so ...to serve another function, I leave the thread open for all to discuss whether Edward Snowden did the 'right' thing', and what to make of displays of solidarity with whistleblowers. Do we have a social obligation to protect 'good' individuals from 'bad' government, or is the government 'good' and Snowden 'bad' in this case? Should we stand aside?
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/stop_prism_fb_b/?csICfcb
I wouldn't normally post this kind of thing - I don't really find appropriate - but in this case, the principle at stake is so high, I'm putting it out there.
Now, what any administration thinks it can do with mountains of inane data is kind of curious. Data-mining for social trends in marketing and general public opinion is probably more fruitful than catching any lone nutter. And the "voluminous wastes of our minds" that end up creating the oceans (wait, are they oceans? Are they mountains? Are they made of cheese?) of data out there are hardly unique, but being part of a pattern; an era, is inevitable and amusing.
But the secrecy and manner in which such data is collected, and the way in which the US treats anyone with a spine to stand up and expose things like PRISM, are worth protesting. I think.
Of course opinions vary, so ...to serve another function, I leave the thread open for all to discuss whether Edward Snowden did the 'right' thing', and what to make of displays of solidarity with whistleblowers. Do we have a social obligation to protect 'good' individuals from 'bad' government, or is the government 'good' and Snowden 'bad' in this case? Should we stand aside?