Idk why people think these are mutually exclusive concepts.
βThose who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safetyβ
Define "Security" for me.
How can I trust this "Security"?
Security is to protect your identity, your wallet, and/or your life. Things that matter.Privacy is to protect your name, your reputation, and/or your social anxiety. Things that don't necessarily matter at all.
http://techcrunch.com/2014/02/14/how-the-world-butchered-benjamin-franklins-quote-on-liberty-vs-security/
Quote from: Mordo on April 12, 2016, 02:46:23 PMIdk why people think these are mutually exclusive concepts.Security is to protect your identity, your wallet, and/or your life. Things that matter.Privacy is to protect your name, your reputation, and/or your social anxiety. Things that don't necessarily matter at all.
Presumably it's actions taken by a government which legitimately result in significantly less tension, unease or discord in society presented either by domestic or international threats.
Because we're discussing principles. If you're saying "I prefer privacy because I don't trust the government", then fine. But what you're actually saying is not a commentary on the relative value of either privacy or security, because I imagine you feel less secure precisely because your privacy is being violated. It's entirely possible to live in a world where security and privacy are perfectly correlated, as the only threat individuals face is a tyrannical State.
If it's solely on principles I'd still say privacy. Because security comes naturally from your precautions for privacy.
Not absolutely. The question is whether or not it is legitimate to sacrifice some privacy which is legitimately getting in the way of implementing genuinely security-enhancing measures. For the purpose of this discussion, there is conflict between the two. In an actual trade-off, which would you choose?
The most successful terrorist attacks kill a few thousand people. My country had hundreds of millions of people. The chance of dying in a terrorist attack are so slim that "security" is basically useless. Privacy is more important.