General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums"Big Brother's Prying Eyes"--The "Lessig Interview" to Blow your Mind...
Last edited Mon Feb 17, 2014, 09:45 PM - Edit history (1)
Full Show : Big Brothers Prying Eyes
Whatever your take on the recent revelations about government spying on our phone calls and Internet activity, theres no denying that Big Brother is bigger and less brotherly than we thought. Whats the resulting cost to our privacy and more so, our democracy? Lawrence Lessig, professor of law and director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard University and founder of Stanford Law Schools Center for Internet and Society, discusses the implications of our governments actions, Edward Snowdens role in leaking the information, and steps we must take to better protect our privacy.
Snowden describes agents having the authority to pick and choose who theyre going to be following on the basis of their hunch about what makes sense and what doesnt make sense. This is the worst of both worlds. We have a technology now that gives them access to everything, but a culture if again its true that encourages them to be as wide ranging as they can, Lessig tells Bill. The question is are there protections or controls or counter technologies to make sure that when the government gets access to this information they cant misuse it in all the ways that, you know, anybody who remembers Nixon believes and fears governments might use?
Few are as knowledgeable about the impact of the Internet on our public and private lives as Lessig, who argues that government needs to protect American rights with the same determination and technological sophistication it uses to invade our privacy and root out terrorists.
If we dont have technical measures in place to protect against misuse, this is just a trove of potential misuse
Weve got to think about the technology as a protector of liberty too. And the government should be implementing technologies to protect our liberties, Lessig says. Because if they dont, we dont figure out how to build that protection into the technology, it wont be there.
We should recognize in a world of terrorism the governments going to be out there trying to protect us. But lets make sure that theyre using tools or technology that also protects the privacy side of what they should be protecting.
A former conservative whos now a liberal, Lessig also knows that the caustic impact of money is another weapon capable of mortally wounding democracy. His recent book, Republic, Lost: How Money Corrupts Congress and a Plan to Stop It, decries a pervasive dependence corruption in our government and politics that should sound a desperate alarm for both the Left and the Right. Here, Lessig outlines a radical approach to the problem that uses big money itself to reform big money-powered corruption.
http://billmoyers.com/episode/full-show-big-brother%E2%80%99s-prying-eyes/
KoKo
(84,711 posts)hootinholler
(26,449 posts)Oops, sorry for shouting.
I guess this isn't as exciting as a gender war.
KoKo
(84,711 posts)And, wonder if that isn't some Orwellian Nightmare...that there is so much on Democrat's plates...while the RW Forges On with the Koch/ALEC/COC /Wall Street Money!
truedelphi
(32,324 posts)Moyers calls Lessig's attention to the idea that the "plumbers" and "burglars" were the Watergate guys who went to Watergate to spy on the Democratic Headquarters, and Lessig replies, that these days the plumbers would be called "contractors."
That about sums it up. We already know, for instance, that Homeland Security and its money wiring surveillance operation retrieved the information that indicated that Elliot Spitzer was involved with the Washington Madam and her escort service. So immediately Spitzer is thrown to the wolves, and soon he finds himself out of office.
Why Spitzer, one would ask? After all, it is common knowledge inside the Beltway that a good many guys in Congress utilized that Madam's escort service. So why this governor of New York?
Well, for one thing, Spitzer was no friend of Monsanto's, as he had fined Monsanto
some $ 50,000 for stating out loud in advertisements on radio and Tv that Monsanto 's RoundUp was a safe product. Spitzer made it clear that should Monsanto continue to do that, it would continue to pay that fine.
So the American people lose someone in office who is a friend to the environment and to people's health, and it is done through the use of a network whose purpose is supposedly preserving our National Security?!?
snot
(10,540 posts)there's a transcript.