Brin on privacy

From: John K Clark (johnkc@well.com)
Date: Wed Dec 11 1996 - 22:30:11 MST


-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

Sent to David Brin and The Extropian List:

It is a well known phenomenon that you challenge somebody's pet ideas all you
want to and anger is seldom produced provided the person having the
brainstorm can strongly defend it. On the other hand, if he can think of no
way to defend his concepts then some people are not grateful for having their
errors corrected but become enraged.

I just received in private E mail a response from Mr. Brin about my recent
post commenting on his "Transparent society". Mr. Brin Informed me that all
of my points were wrong. It would have been nice if he could have, elaborated
a little and explained exactly why I was wrong but Mr. Brin is a busy person,
discussing the issues I raised would have taken time and a man needs to set
priorities. Make sure a personal insult is inserted into every line and then
if you have any time left over, say a word or two about the issues.

There is one thing I said that he especially disliked.

>>David Brin brin@cts.com (d.brin)
>>Without accountability, freedom will die.

>Clark:
>Thus I assume you also oppose using a secret ballot in elections.

Mr. Brin told me this was offensive and he was certain it was deliberate,
because of this gross misconduct on my part he was breaking off further
commutation with me. I will leave it as an exercise for the reader to deduce
if this is this author's true reason for not wanting to continue a debate on
the very subject he is currently writing a book on.

                                         John K Clark johnkc@well.com

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.i

iQCzAgUBMq+dK303wfSpid95AQGy2wTvXihJIgmIb6ZFtj2uU6LtpBeC6ayulps2
2Os9Ctt1pVNdqXzeXIbwco5rtBZm9Su04O8wBpPtcmVmrEOOGNmQj7Bx4AfQpHCP
cFVMkdXWzM1YW7HRnUXf3QeM6KEkZglfAi98hEFPX3xTalxUXXD91mtODRqWxzQu
viyaAtUN8F81kI3WYT9L2yLbPrZ28/06l1c7GQsl1g7JtPSRRhI=
=iD94
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:35:53 MST