From: Michael M. Butler (butler@comp-lib.org)
Date: Sun Dec 03 2000 - 11:23:18 MST
It's going to be an arms race for some, and open arms for others. I
think a sheaf of strategies and solutions, if not a spectrum, is
healthy.
More people should adopt technology more mindfully than they seem to, I
think--but I don't know how to do that for anyone other than myself, and
I don't have a perfect track record by any means.
Some people boggle to discover that many Plain Folk in Pennsylvania have
cell phones. This is because they think the Amish are luddites, when
they are not. They are, however, very selective about the technologies
they adopt. More power to that, say I.
I think secluded glens off the information superhighway are a fine idea,
even if some of them have razor wire around them. If you can keep 'em.
"J. R. Molloy" wrote:
>
> Does the world want privacy more or less than information wants to be
> free? Does the one exclude the other? Which side will prevail?
>
> I don't believe privacy is something you "achieve" -- it's something you
> create (temporarily).
> How do you do it?
> If I told you, then for the sake of my privacy (to preserve its security),
> I'd have to kill you.
>
> Stay hungry,
>
> --J. R.
> 3M TA3
>
> "It is enough that the people know there was an election.
> The people who cast the votes decide nothing.
> The people who count the votes decide everything." --Joseph Stalin
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