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| quote: | Originally posted by netroM
Don't facebook have the right to sell pictures of you for uses in ads or commercials without you knowing of it? Even pictures taken of you uploaded by others?
I've certainly heard such stories at least. |
That's different, of course. We were talking about CCTV specifically. It's like all the retarded Germans who got their houses blurred out when Street View first got implemented here. What is there to be scared of? That someone in Nigeria knows what colour you like your house painted?
| quote: | Originally posted by Tasty Onions
Also, there's no practical guarantee of surveillance capabilities being used only for "legitimate purposes." Months ago I read a story about some officers using surveillance privileges in the U.S. to stalk and harass women they were interested in. Any power granted to law enforcement or others for "legitimate" use is also, in effect, a power granted to that inevitable fraction of people who will abuse it. So it's not only about the value of privacy in itself: it's also about the cost-benefit analysis of evidence gained versus new kinds of abuse made possible. |
Great post, which I agree very much with in regards to person-to-person surveillance. Again though, in the context of CCTV I think there's very little potential for such activity.
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