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Right to Privacy

Discussion in 'Alley of Dangerous Angles' started by NOG (No Other Gods), Sep 29, 2005.

  1. NOG (No Other Gods)

    NOG (No Other Gods) Going to church doesn't make you a Christian

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    [​IMG] What is this 'Right to Privacy' thing, anyway? Where is it in the constitution(US)? I don't remember there being a Privacy Amendent. Now I'm not saying it's altogether bad, I like my 4th ammendment, but it has gone mad!
    Cooing at Babies
    This link says that babies need their 'right to privacy' to be respected. Who has privacy in a hospital?
    Even worse, they just shut down all the red-light cams in Virginia Beach because people said it was an invasion of their 'right to privacy'! You're driving on a PUBLIC ROAD! Anyone on the sidewalk can see you and what you're doing! What makes these people think they have any right to privacy there? :flaming:
    Thoughts? Comments? Mad Ramblings?
     
  2. Felinoid

    Felinoid Who did the what now?

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    The cooing at babies thing was already covered in an AoLS topic, but the red-light cam thing is just ridiculous. Perhaps we should also shut down the security cameras at the bank so as not to invade the bank-robbers' privacy as well. :rolleyes: Privacy is very specifically not guaranteed when you're in PUBLIC.

    Ultimately, people have two options in respect to their driving:
    1. You're in public, duh! Act accordingly.
    2. Tint your windows if you want your car to be a private place. Don't be surprised when you get a ticket for reckless endangerment, though. :D
     
  3. chevalier

    chevalier Knight of Everfull Chalice ★ SPS Account Holder Veteran

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    The right to privacy is important. First of all, the right to privacy (edit: typo) overrides any "right to curiosity". I don't know what you mean by red-light cams, but if there are any street cams anywhere, the video and image they capture should only be used for the direct intented purpose, not for some additional viewing pleasure.

    Let's imagine there are cameras in a public place. It's okay to have those to monitor the place and prevent crime. But it isn't okay to broadcast videos of people making out in the local media. As for roads, even if everyone can see it, broadcasting it shouldn't be allowed.

    As for hospitals, rooms with babies shouldn't look like shopping galleries. If a person doesn't want to be asked questions by strangers, he shouldn't. In a hospital, this is perfectly understandable and being exposed to random queries by strangers shouldn't be the default option. What about breast-feeding? Some women don't care, but some would be shocked by the very idea of being seen.

    Generally, I am against obsessive protection of privacy of individuals from individuals, but privacy gets much more important in relations between the citizen and a public institution. For example, those nude scans on American airports suck. Civilian hired guards, who aren't even medical stuff or uniformed service (with an oath to protect the country and a special discipline), being able to select people for complete nude strip-search, even people of the opposite gender... come on, that sucks! Nothing on earth can justify that.

    They key concern is that human beings cannot be treated as objects. Security, curiosity, whatever. Humans are persons and should be treated as such.

    Of course, we see various extremes and even abuse of privacy protection all around. Probably all of us know at least one person described as a "privacy freak". People shouldn't be surprised when something they have said or done in public is brought up. Public info is fair game. But it's wrong when information is used for some collateral, unintented purposes by public institutions or when humans are reduced to objects of someone's curiosity or whatever such, when deception is used to obtain information... and so on.

    [ September 30, 2005, 20:23: Message edited by: chevalier ]
     
  4. Hacken Slash

    Hacken Slash OK... can you see me now?

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    NOG, I'd like to hear more about the red light cameras being shut down due to privacy rights...thery're all over the place out here in Mesa, Arizona.

    Cameras in public places are always a sticky subject...If it's OK to monitor security cameras at a traffic intersection, why can't "Fred the security guard" monitor the security cameras in the womans rest room at a department store? (or "Jane the security guard" for that matter).

    Most cases like this come down to some sort of abuse of the right to monitor, not a general invasion of privacy.

    As for the "baby" thing...I don't want a stranger making stupid noises and faces at my kid either. Beat it, pervert.
     
  5. Aldeth the Foppish Idiot

    Aldeth the Foppish Idiot Armed with My Mallet O' Thinking Veteran

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    @ Chev

    Red light cameras are cameras that are placed at intersections, that activate and take a picture when a car goes through a red light. The picture shows the car, the red light, and the license plate on the car. You get the ticket in the mail. They aren't that wide spread, and are usually only found in very specific intersections of major cities.
     
  6. chevalier

    chevalier Knight of Everfull Chalice ★ SPS Account Holder Veteran

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    @HS: Speaking of that, I remember reading pieces of a court ruling that the guards' equal employment rights were more important than the inmates' right to privacy and freedom from being seen in the nude by members of the opposite gender. That kind of judge is just pathetic and we have more and more such people nowadays. Whoever says that cross-gender staff viewing nude people is no big deal is a waste of breath talking to.

    @Aldeth: Then I see no problem with those cameras. Has there been any abuse?
     
  7. Aldeth the Foppish Idiot

    Aldeth the Foppish Idiot Armed with My Mallet O' Thinking Veteran

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    Not that I'm aware of, and most mayors of cities that have them, love them. They generate good revenue with virtually no cost beyond the purchase price of the camera and the installation. They pay for themselves manifold in a matter of a few weeks.
     
  8. NonSequitur Gems: 19/31
    Latest gem: Aquamarine


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    CCTV is a difficult one; a camera in a public place will necessarily view people of both sexes. If the cameras are there to prevent criminal behaviour, then it's a stronger case, but by no means a justification in and of itself. As a general rule, you've got a great deal less privacy in public, and rightly so. In security, it's another case where gender may become a legitimate occupational requirement, depending on the population under observation.

    Sometimes, the ability for privacy advocates to utterly miss the point amazes me. Getting rid of red-light cameras for privacy reasons? Get real. In my experience, they only trigger when someone runs a red light or is breaking the speed limit going through an intersection. I know this because I did three years of night shift at a service station at a busy intersection, and the cameras going off intermittently gave me the necessary schadenfreude to make that mindless work bearable.

    The revenue-raising point Aldeth made is spot-on, although truer for speed cameras, in my experience. Those things are money in the bank for government, second only to gambling machines.
     
  9. Hacken Slash

    Hacken Slash OK... can you see me now?

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    They sell a polarized, clear plastic film that you can put over your auto license plate making photo images blurry. Not that I'd ever use one ;) .

    Photo radar is real big in some of the communities out here. For that they park a special van beside the road that photographs the front of the speeding vehicle as it approaches (hopefully with the smiling face of the driver) then a second photo as the vehicle departs to capture the tag number. Unmanned, revenue generators...especially when they pick the right spot to wait.
     
  10. Harbourboy

    Harbourboy Take thy form from off my door! Veteran Pillars of Eternity SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!)

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    Most people who complain about infringements of their privacy rights are those who have something to hide. Genuine, law abiding citizens should have nothing to worry about from speed cameras or CCTV, unless they are in places like bathrooms.
     
  11. Chandos the Red

    Chandos the Red This Wheel's on Fire

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    How important is the right to privacy? This is from a very famous court case - Roe V. Wade:

     
  12. Gnarfflinger

    Gnarfflinger Wiseguy in Training

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    Okay, bathrooms should be private. Hospitals should be private when you are in your room or treatment area. Mind you most of this is in public, and thus privacy would not apply. If a couple were to have sex on a busy street they have no right to chastize onlookers because they exposed themselves to prying eyes...
     
  13. Late-Night Thinker Gems: 17/31
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    ...and if that couple put a hat in front of them, I'd probably share my change...
     
  14. BOC

    BOC Let the wild run free Veteran

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    When the trafic cameras were introduced here, the police used to sent two photos, one with the tag number and one with the persons who where in the car. The second one has created family problems in some cases because when they have been received by the wife, she has seen in the photo not only the smiling face of the husband driving the car but the smiling face of an unknown woman as well ;) .
     
  15. CĂșchulainn Gems: 28/31
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    What about the 'privacy' of the dead. There are many news stories about US troops trading images of dead Iraqi's and Afghans for access to a porn site. But this is covered with 'Freedom of Speech'.

    Also worth mentioning are those 'Real Death' videos.
     
  16. Carcaroth

    Carcaroth I call on the priests, saints and dancin' girls ★ SPS Account Holder

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    Speed and traffic red-light cameras in the UK can only be used if they take pictures of the rear of the vehicle. (Thus protecting the privacy of the individuals in the car). Tickets go to the owner of the car, who then has to ensure that the driver at the time takes responsibility. This enables people to escape a ban if they are already have points on their license and can get someone else to take new ones. (Typically, it's 3-points per speeding offense, and 12 points means a 6-month? ban)
    Camera's are now in operation which record vehicles as different points in the journey so their average speed can be calculated. However, I believe they are only allowed on stretches of road between junctions so someones overall journey can't be tracked.

    Most streets, shops, public transport stations etc have CCTV, mainly for security purposes. The current law states that (within a set period of time) you can demand any company/person holding CCTV images of you for a copy of the tape. From a privacy point of view, in your copy they have to blank out the faces of any other people shown in the same footage. I believe there is a maximum period of time a company can keep CCTV images as well (excepting crimes), although typically they have a monthly rotating cycle (31 VHS tapes rotated) due to storage limitations. Of course digital recording is making inroads into this. Unfortunately, it is nigh on impossible to stop security staff from making sneeky copies which are then distributed on the internet. I'm aware of a least one case in Covent garden where they captured a couple having sex. (The cameras involved could read the text on the menus in a restaurant about 150m down the road.)

    The hospital story is simply ludicrous, although the hospital should make allowance for anyone who doesn't want their child to be visible.
     
  17. chevalier

    chevalier Knight of Everfull Chalice ★ SPS Account Holder Veteran

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    @HB:

    Agreed. Also, those people tend to be less restrictive about the privacy of others. They will complain if you get familiar with some public information about them, but they will read your mail. :rolleyes:

    @BOC:

    If I were a public officer and a citizen came to me complaining about his wife seeing his speeding ticket along with a photo of a woman in his car, I would just ask him if he expects the state to be an accomplice in hiding his adultery. That sort of privacy is not something that should ever benefit from legal protection.

    If I recall correctly, someone lost a case in Poland after informing a husband that his wife used to work as a prostitute, which was accurate information. Criminal offence, slander. Probably fine, if not suspended prison term.

    Liars have no right to privacy in their stinking schemes. I believe in people's potential to repent of their guilt and move on, changing their ways, even if the guilt is something particularly deceitful. In that case, it could even be desirable to keep the person's offences secret (I know priests who say you shouldn't tell your spouse if you commit adultery because it will only create pain and undo nothing... I'm not sure if I want to make my mind on this now), but public service and the state itself should never be expect to participate as an accomplice in a dishonourable affair and help people weave their nets of deception.

    @Cuchulainn:

    The dead are dead, so rights reside with living families and other successors. However, I can't but think of laws protecting the dignity of the dead. There is a legal construct of "insult of the grave". It also applies to the body, not just the grave itself. An affront to human remains is a crime where I live.

    @Carcaroth:

    A couple of years in prison, lifetime ban from all kinds of security and surveillance work, as well as a civil lawsuit should fix this. Sounds harsh, but this kind of wrong is not something like hitting another drunk guy over a pint of beer or insulting an idiot who's asking for it. There's quite a massive degree of malice prepense and the crime has a strong antisocial mark, so a harsh penalty is very much in order IMHO. Same as tanning beds people who broadcast nude videos of their customers on the internet -- those should be banned from any such work for life and forced to relinquish the business if the own it.
     
  18. Carcaroth

    Carcaroth I call on the priests, saints and dancin' girls ★ SPS Account Holder

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    Oh I tend to agree Chev, if such people are caught there is no doubt they'll lose their job. However, catching them is the difficult thing in the first place. It's going to be a rare thing anyway (getting video footage of people doing naughty things in public) so it's unlikely that anyone who knows the said people will see it. Therefore no-one makes complaints, and it is a waste of resources to police your security staff for something that may or may not be going on.

    In addition, there are no laws about who can or can-not be employed as a member of security, it's down to the individual company. Some will be a lot less caring in the first place, and it's also illegal to give someone a bad job reference.
     
  19. Aldeth the Foppish Idiot

    Aldeth the Foppish Idiot Armed with My Mallet O' Thinking Veteran

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    How is it slander if it's true? Maybe the definition of slander is different Poland, but in the US, one of the necessary elements to prove slander is that it was false. If the wife WAS a prostitute, then stating that she was is not slander.

    What? What if they were a lousy employee?
     
  20. chevalier

    chevalier Knight of Everfull Chalice ★ SPS Account Holder Veteran

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    Tell that to Polish judges. The criminal code is ambiguous, so it's just court practice (which officially is not law). Slander, defamation, whatever such. Probably defamation would be the best translation.
     
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