There are many cases to be made for privacy. But what if most of those cases are wrong? What if privacy in our personal lives only leaves us more susceptible to being bullied or blackmailed? What if the case for government and military privacy is only leads to an imbalance of power and trust between a government and its people? Or if military supremacy dependent on secrets and privacy is an obsolete concept.
Security expert and author Ben Malisow dismantles common notions of the need for privacy and replaces it with these ideas:
the end of privacy is an end to shame and the beginning of new opportunities. Ending government and military privacy will lead to better policy and practices And Malisow argues the best solution is the ubiquity of access, not government regulation of data.
Format
Kindle Edition
Release
October 23, 2020
Exposed: How Revealing Your Data and Eliminating Privacy Increases Trust and Liberates Humanity
There are many cases to be made for privacy. But what if most of those cases are wrong? What if privacy in our personal lives only leaves us more susceptible to being bullied or blackmailed? What if the case for government and military privacy is only leads to an imbalance of power and trust between a government and its people? Or if military supremacy dependent on secrets and privacy is an obsolete concept.
Security expert and author Ben Malisow dismantles common notions of the need for privacy and replaces it with these ideas:
the end of privacy is an end to shame and the beginning of new opportunities. Ending government and military privacy will lead to better policy and practices And Malisow argues the best solution is the ubiquity of access, not government regulation of data.