Stallman: How Much Surveillance Can Democracy Withstand?
Editor’s Note: Given Richard Stallman’s longtime role in promoting software that respects user freedom (including GNU, which just turned 30), his suggested “remedies” for all the ways technology can be re-designed to provide benefits while avoiding surveillance — like the smart meters example he shares below — seem particularly relevant.
The current level of general surveillance in society is incompatible with human rights. To recover our freedom and restore democracy, we must reduce surveillance to the point where it is possible for whistleblowers of all kinds to talk with journalists without being spotted. To do this reliably, we must reduce the surveillance capacity of the systems we use.
Using free/libre software, as I’ve advocated for 30 years, is the first step in taking control of our digital lives. We can’t trust non-free software; the NSA uses and even creates security weaknesses in non-free software so as to invade our own computers and routers. Free software gives us control of our own computers, but that won’t protect our privacy once we set foot on the internet.
Bipartisan legislation to “curtail the domestic surveillance powers” in the U.S. is being drawn up, but it relies on limiting the government’s use of our virtual dossiers. That won’t suffice to protect whistleblowers if “catching the whistleblower” is grounds for access sufficient to identify him or her. We need to go further.
- Tags:
- accumulated data
- democracy
- dispersed data
- Edward Snowden
- Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
- espionage
- facial recognition software
- FISA Court
- freedom of speech
- government surveillance
- human rights
- internet
- journalists
- LoveINT
- malware
- massive surveillance
- misuse of data
- National Security Agency (NSA)
- open source software (OSS)
- phone records
- PRISM
- privacy
- terrorists
- whistleblowers
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