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posted by chromas on Thursday April 05 2018, @04:40AM   Printer-friendly
from the remember-the-printers dept.

Richard Stallman writes in the Guardian:

Journalists have been asking me whether the revulsion against the abuse of Facebook data could be a turning point for the campaign to recover privacy. That could happen, if the public makes its campaign broader and deeper.

Broader, meaning extending to all surveillance systems, not just Facebook. Deeper, meaning to advance from regulating the use of data to regulating the accumulation of data. Because surveillance is so pervasive, restoring privacy is necessarily a big change, and requires powerful measures.

The surveillance imposed on us today far exceeds that of the Soviet Union. For freedom and democracy's sake, we need to eliminate most of it. There are so many ways to use data to hurt people that the only safe database is the one that was never collected. Thus, instead of the EU's approach of mainly regulating how personal data may be used (in its General Data Protection Regulation or GDPR), I propose a law to stop systems from collecting personal data.

The robust way to do that, the way that can't be set aside at the whim of a government, is to require systems to be built so as not to collect data about a person. The basic principle is that a system must be designed not to collect certain data, if its basic function can be carried out without that data.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by TheRaven on Thursday April 05 2018, @09:59AM

    by TheRaven (270) on Thursday April 05 2018, @09:59AM (#662846) Journal
    I think what's really needed is a well-funded non-profit to offer hosted services using a well-documented protocol that supports federation. As with email, I want to be able to run my own server, but I also want people that don't want to run their own server to be able to just pay someone else to do it for them (or get a free service if they put up with ads). The cost of hosting and bandwidth is tiny at scale. WhatsApp was able to make a profit charging $1/year/customer, before Facebook bought them and that's cheap enough that most people wouldn't even think about it as a cost.
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