Thursday, November 14, 2019
The Right to Privacy in the Information Age Essay -- Exploratory Essay
   Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In a day in the life of Joe, an  ordinary American, he drives to the office, owrks at a computer, browses in a  shop at lunch time, then picks up some milk and a video on the way home, where a  pile of junk mail and bills await him. At every stop alo ng the way, his doings  can be watched, monitored, tabulated, and sold. On this typical day, Joe, our  ordinary American, does not realize how technology has changed his private life.  Joe's driving route may be tracked by a sophisticated traffic system. At work,  his employer can listen in to his business conversations on the telephone, and  tap into his computer, e-mail, or voice-mail. At the shopping center, the secret  closed-circuit camera may seek him out personally. The shop is allowed to put  peepho les in the fitting rooms. Some have hidden microphones, too. If he uses  his credit card, not only does the card company keep tabs on when, where, and  what he buys, it may sell that data to other marketers. A purchas   e of out-door  furniture means catalog s selling barbecue grills, mowing machines, or lawn seed  are likely to be piled as junk mail in his mail box. Quickly he sits down at his  desk and fills out the Reader's Digest Sweepstakes Entry form, hoping that this  time Ed McMahon will arrive at his door with the big check, so he eagerly  supplies personal information which, unknowingly to him, will be sold to other  marketers and distributed to databases throughout the world. Joe is unaware of  others who, on this typical day in the electronic age, ha ve peered into his  private life.     Ã       Technology plays a significant part in today's society. As technology  advances, new controversies arise, many involving privacy rights. Medical,  workplace, and consumer pri...              ...per, Michael. "With Success of Cameras, Concerns over Privacy." New York  Times 5     Feb. 1997: B4.     Dowd, Ann Reilly. "Protect Your Privacy." Money Aug. 1997: 107-108, 112.     Everett-Green, Robert. "Cyberspace." 1996 Encyclopedia Britannica Book of the  Year. 1996.     Goode, Stephen. "Are Privacy Rights Still Inalienable?" Insight Magazine on  the News 19     Aug. 1996: 18-19.     Houlder, Vanessa. "The Blessing and Curse of E-mail." World Press Review June  1997:     33-34.     Long, Robert Emmet. Rights to Privacy. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 1997.     "Medical Privacy is Under Attack." [http://www.ACLU.org] 26 Oct. 1997.     "Workplace in America." [http://www.ACLU.org] 26 Oct. 1997.     "We Know You're Reading This." Economist 10 Feb. 1996: 28.     "William Faulkner: On Privacy." The Annals of America Chicago: Encyclopedia  Britannica,     Inc., 1968.     Ã                        
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.