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by matz1
1766 days ago
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As technology getting better and better, it becoming more and more difficult to hide information. Imagine smaller and smaller device that can record more and more information and transmit it faster and faster. Information wants to be free. Its simply more pragmatic approach to embrace and adapt to transparency. > the powerful would still have ways to achieve it, while the less powerful wouldn't The imbalance of power come from information asymmetry. e.g The government has more information then the citizen thus they are more powerful but if we strive for transparency for both side then the playing field is leveled. Sure you can do that by privacy for both side but then you are fighting against the progress of technology. |
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Also, I don't think you can embrace transparency, no matter how much you'd like to, because of how humans work. How they work is of course not objectively described (yet), but the importance of privacy is recognized in places like the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, which describes individual privacy not less than a basic human right. Or, looking at the opposite, constant exposure can lead to things like the Chilling Effect, which, in layman terms, means always-on self-censoring due to constantly being watched, and therefore exposed to consequences. Which would indicate of the failure of the people embracing transparency.