An
interesting article from the BBC about the Romanian secret police.
Quote:
Original post by Way Walker
The thing that got me about reading 1984 was that it seemed that the proles were pretty content. The rationing was probably rough, but that's not unexpected in a time of war, and, otherwise, they seemed to live normal lives. It connected in my mind with one of the two lines that I remember from Game of Thrones:
It is no matter to them if the high lords play their game of thrones, so long as they are left in peace. They never are.
It's been a while, but it seemed to me that the proles in 1984 were, essentially, left in peace.
A little off topic maybe, but...
The proles were left in peace because they were no threat. They were happy in their ignorance, easily sedated and subdued from questioning the absurdity of perpetual war by the cheap, trashy entertainment.
It has been a while since I've read the book, but I seem to recall that there was an implication that the agents of the thought police would maintain (infrequent?) supervision even on the proles, to isolate and elimanate any overly intelligent, charismatic, artistic or resistant types. But I don't remember this being explicitly spelled out.
A little more on topic, I think privacy is an important issue.
I accept the realities of life, that for some companies it is this data which generates the income, e.g. Google. At the same time I think they have a duty of care which many companies are failing to live up to.
One way of combatting it is to make it a liability rather than an asset. This would discourage companies from collecting data for no reason, and discourage them from sharing it, or maybe requiring all personal data transfers to be anonymised in a particular fashion. Data cannot be "sold off" if a company goes under, it must be permenantly deleted.
For example, make it illegal for companies to sell or share data, or make it illegal for a company to aggregate or correlate data aquired from different client companies. Maybe put a tax on such databases, proportionate to size and how invasive or anonymous the data is, or how much is publically exposed, or combinations thereof. Impose *massive* fines/damages for data losses or leaks.
I like the idea behind superpig's suggestions. I'd almost want to have a set of privacy policies that a company could choose from, but I know that would be unworkable in practise. Privacy policies remind me of open source licenses. If you boil it down to the important details, there should be only 5 or 10 possible licenses. Yet for some reason every second open source project that starts wants to have a new license with some subtle and unnecessary difference from existing variants.
These are just some ideas off the top of my head.