Sunday, July 17, 2011

The Limits Of Privacy Epub

The Limits Of Privacy



Author: Amitai Etzioni
Edition: 1
Publisher: Basic Books
Binding: Paperback
ISBN: 046504090X



The Limits Of Privacy


Privacy is perhaps the most hallowed of American rights—and most people are concerned that new technologies available to governments and corporations threaten to erode this most privileged of rights. Medical books The Limits Of Privacy. But in The Limits of Privacy, Amitai Etzioni offers a decidedly different point of view, in which the right to privacy is balanced against concern for public safety and health. Etzioni looks at five flashpoint issues: Megan’s Laws, HIV testing of infants, deciphering of encrypted messages, national identification cards, and medical records, and concludes that there are times when Amricans’ insistence on privacy is not in the best interests of society at large. He offers four clear and concise criteria which, when applied jointly, help us to determine when the right to privacy should be overridden for the greater public good.Almost every week headlines warn us that our cell phones are being monitored, our e-mails read, and our medical records traded on the open market Medical books Overseers of the Poor : Surveillance, Resistance, and the Limits of Privacy. Overseers of the Poor : Surveillance, Resistance, and the Limits of Privacy, ISBN-13: 9780226293615, ISBN-10: 0226293610

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Overseers of the Poor : Surveillance, Resistance, and the Limits of Privacy, ISBN-13: 9780226293615, ISBN-10: 0226293610

Bargain Hunter Find (Try) The Limits Of Privacy Etzioni, Amitai Product Details Title : The Limits Of Privacy Author : Etzioni, Amitai Binding : Paperback Publisher : Basic Books Publication Date : 2000-04-01 ISBN : 046504090X Condition : Used: Very Good Text condition : Jacket condition : Location : N5-4/11 Edition : 1 Book ID : BG120905015 Ebay Item No. : 300774956954 Notes : Unread book with light shelf wear, light edges and corners wear(light pressure marks, minor scratches and creases). Ha

Electronics Cameras Computers Software Housewares Sports DVDs Music Books Games Toys in titles descriptions Company Info |Checkout Info |Shipping Info |Return Policy |FAQ's Add us as a favorite seller By continuing with your purchase using the eBay Buy It Now button, you agree to the Buy Terms of Use at http://stores.ebay.com/Buys-Internet-Superstore/Terms.html . The Limits of Privacy - Etzioni, Amitai THIS IS A BRAND NEW UNOPENED ITEM. Description Internationally renowned communitarian leader

The Limits of Privacy



Medical Book The Limits Of Privacy



But in The Limits of Privacy, Amitai Etzioni offers a decidedly different point of view, in which the right to privacy is balanced against concern for public safety and health. Etzioni looks at five flashpoint issues: Megan’s Laws, HIV testing of infants, deciphering of encrypted messages, national identification cards, and medical records, and concludes that there are times when Amricans’ insistence on privacy is not in the best interests of society at large. He offers four clear and concise criteria which, when applied jointly, help us to determine when the right to privacy should be overridden for the greater public good.Almost every week headlines warn us that our cell phones are being monitored, our e-mails read, and our medical records traded on the open market. Public opinion polls show that Americans are dismayed about incursions against personal privacy. Congress and state legislatures are considering laws designed to address their concerns.Focusing on five flashpoint issues—Megan’s Law, mandatory HIV testing of infants, encryption of electronic documents, national identification cards and biometric identifiers, and medical records—The Limits of Privacy argues counterintuitively that sometimes major public health and safety concerns should outweigh the individual’s right to privacy. Presenting four concise criteria to determine when the right to privacy should be preserved and when it should be overridden in the interests of the wider community, Etzioni argues that, in some cases, we would do well to sacrifice the privacy of the individual in the name of the common good.
Privacy isn't all it's made out to be, says George Washington University scholar Amitai Etzioni. "Without privacy no society can long remain free," he writes, but our communities also have other goals that sometimes must override the privacy imperative. "Should the FBI be in a position to crack the encrypted messages employed by terrorists before they use them to orchestrate the next Oklahoma City bombing?" he asks. Etzioni's answer is a resounding "yes," and he applies similar logic to a number of areas. He believes, for example, that newborn babies should undergo HIV tests without parental consent because they could benefit from immediate treatment, even though mothers worried about personal revelations might object. He also supports the various sorts of "Megan's laws" that try to protect society against sex offenders.

Etzioni believes the government will use this sort of personal information responsibly; his faith is so complete in this regard that he even supports issuing national ID cards to all Americans. Big business doesn't fare nearly as well in his estimation: he worries that companies will abuse private medical records. Although there is much common sense on these pages, most readers will find areas of disagreement with Etzioni. He nevertheless offers an intelligent challenge to America's libertarian impulses. --John J. Miller

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