Archive for the ‘Right to Privacy’ Category

We’re Are All Truman Burbank

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

On The Truman Show, Jim Carrey played a character whose every move was available to the television-viewing public 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, all his life.  Carrey’s character, Truman Burbank, had been adopted by a corporation as a baby and raised on an island within a domed “stage” constructed specifically to turn his whole life into one big reality show.  Near the end of the movie, Truman discovers the truth and manages to escape his faux world, presumably finding a real life of privacy.

In “reality,” this can only happen in the movies.

(more…)

No Expectation of Privacy on the Internet?

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

A concept near and dear to my heart for years now has re-surfaced in the news. For many years, I made my living working with computers. Prior to being an attorney, I worked with the first two Internet Service Provider companies in the Fresno area. This was immediately after the first Internet web browser (Mosaic) was developed and the Internet “went commercial.”

Being of a philosophical bent and also with a strong interest in Anthropology, I couldn’t help but ponder some the impact the Internet was having on our world. And, of course, privacy issues were quickly becoming paramount.

(more…)