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>The US government is wholesale spying on the entirety of electronic communications and working with social media sites to make some voices less prominent. Private business should be able to tell the government to pound sand when banking data is requested without a warrant or subpoena. Do they actually tell the government to pound sand, though? In the end, if I can only rely on the moral codes of for-profit companies who are weighing the value of a good relationship with me versus one with the US government, then I can't rely on much. But the government can and regularly does tell itself to go pound sand. Like the IRS, Census, or any agency with confidential medical records. Also, your examples are of private companies selling data. The government is the buyer in those scenarios, not the guardian. IMO, data is less likely to be shared between government agencies because rarely do both parties benefit. For a company, the database team wins when sales wins, as long as they get to present their success together. Government workers follow strict pay scales, get no bonuses, and have nearly guaranteed job security. They also have notoriously few ambitious ladder-climbers. It's hard enough to get them to share data with each other when it's legal and ethical. If there's any possibility sharing data would break rules, government will refuse to risk it. |
> for-profit companies who are weighing the value of a good relationship with me versus one with the US government
For-profit companies shouldn't need or care about a relationship with the US government beyond selling the same product they do to everybody else. That is my ideal. How to get there is the contention. You would like to give the for-profit company to the US government and thus removing the relationship. I would like to see the power the US government has over for-profit businesses reduced and preferably eliminated. Giving banks to the US government results in less private sector and a larger government. A larger government makes more people dependent on the success and benevolence of the government. History has proven unequivocally that governments cannot be trusted to remain neither benevolent nor successful. Concentrating power makes the temptation for government malevolence too great. Power will be abused by someone eventually. That is human nature. Concentrating power is just creating a ticking bomb. The way for more people to succeed is to reduce dependence on government and distribute power among businesses that serve only their customers. Business that are reliant on the trust of their customers will think twice about betraying that trust. If their customers ever learn of their betrayal it means the death of their business in competitive markets.