|
When Property Goes, So Does Privacy
By Amy Peikoff
The nationwide panic engendered by the Justice
Department's subpoena to Google was, according to many lawyers
and scholars, a mistake. Timothy Wu, a law professor at
Columbia, said that the only interesting aspects of the case
concern technical rules of legal procedure. "This particular
subpoena does not raise serious privacy issues," he said.
It is true that the subpoena demands only a week's worth of
searches, and the addresses of a million randomly-selected
websites. Apparently, these aggregations of data alone cannot
link any individual to a particular search or website viewing.
Nonetheless, the panic was no mistake. If the subpoena succeeds,
it will establish an ominous precedent: That the Justice
Department can seize Google's (and anyone else's) time and
property, without warrant or particularized suspicion and,
moreover, the seized property need have only dubious relevance
to the defense of a proposed law of dubious merit. ACLU attorney
Aden J. Fine was right in identifying the subpoena as "another
instance of government overreaching." Google is to be applauded
for its courage in resisting it.
Internet Law specialist Susan P. Crawford warns that, while
this subpoena does not seek data that most people would consider
private e.g., searches which can reveal a person's unpublicized
goals, preferences and problems, sexual, medical, and otherwise,
nonetheless, "the next subpoena could ask for that kind of
data." The solution, however, is not to enact more privacy
legislation. What we need is a legal system that defends our
right to property and contract.
Warren and Brandeis, in originating a "right" to privacy in
1890, extolled the value of privacy to individuals, but stressed
that their newly-coined right must often yield to the public
interest. Thus arose the "balancing test" approach that is now
used, whenever a right to privacy is invoked, from abortion law,
to search-and-seizure law, to tort law. So, if the Bush
Administration decides that it is in the public interest to have
legislation preventing minors from viewing pornography on the
Internet, then a man's right to privacy in his Internet searches
may be sacrificed in order to defend such legislation, depending
on the outcome of the balancing test. A judge will weigh the
individual's interest in keeping his searches private, against
the public interest, in the government's obtaining the data. How
does he decide which interest prevails? By his subjective
preferences? By public opinion poll? This is no standard. Thanks
to the right to privacy, we enjoy privacy not by right, but by
permission.
Perhaps, it is contempt for the right to property that
sustains our legal system's idea that the only property entitled
to vigorous protection from government seizure is that
containing "private" information. But, Americans must realize
that where property goes, privacy follows. One may choose to
keep his thoughts and interests within the confines of his own
mind. Otherwise, to prevent unwanted disclosure of information,
one needs either an exclusive right to a place in which to store
it, or a contractual agreement of confidentiality, expressed or
implied, with others to whom he voluntarily discloses it. It is,
therefore, only through objective laws protecting property and
contract against warrantless government search and seizure, that
we can safeguard our privacy.
The term, "private," when used to describe information, is no
more objectively definable for legal purposes than is "obscene"
or "pornographic." The referents of such terms change with the
fashions; what was once considered strictly private information
is, today, eagerly shared all over the media and the Internet.
The terms "property" and "contract," by contrast, have definite
referents. Whether someone owns property, or has entered into a
contract is a fact; common law doctrines allow judges
objectively and predictably to determine whether such rights
exist in a particular case. This takes the decision about what
information to disclose away from government, and puts it where
it belongs: In the hands of the individual.
One essential feature of totalitarianism is a government's
ability to punish citizens, not only for what they do or say
publicly, but also for what they think and value in the privacy
of their own minds. As one privacy advocate has said, a record
of one's Internet searches is "a kind of shadow of the thoughts
within your head; your interests, your desires, your hobbies,
your fears." If our government thus begins to have access to the
content of our minds, whenever it decides that this might serve
the public interest, nothing can follow, but a future of thought
control.
Amy Peikoff, Assistant Professor of
Philosophy, United States Air Force Academy
http://eco.freedom.org/articles/peikoff-306.shtml
|