Technology, Luddites, Privacy, Openness, and Manipulation of a Fearful Populace
We are surrounded by Luddite mobs.
Pity our children.
It will get worse.
Before WWII the industrial revolution had reached an equilibrium.
Rousseau was a dead white male, Californians weren't moving to Alaska
for the simple life (and there becoming mass murderers),
Greens were not with us, nor was Nader. The
horror of WWII did not destroy the pre-War world view. During the 50's
America prospered; Western Europe and Japan were rebuilt as free
democracies. The 60's and 70's, however, were from another mold. One can't
blame those times on the atom bomb, perhaps, but it was then
that opposition to nuclear weapons, rational behavior
in which many leading physicists indulged themselves, evolved into
wide-spread opposition to nuclear power. A small number of activists,
_not_ the aforementioned physicists, were able to play the fear and
ignorance of a majority of the population of this country into a halt
on construction of nuclear plants.
The anti-nuclear was first of this era's Luddite mobs.
[more properly, _neo_-Luddite mobs; the original Luddites were honest weavers
thrown into poverty by the first burst of the industrial revolution.]
For a sampling
of the online literature, see
Sanderson Beck's page
or the list of links
on
"Jay's Leftist and 'Progressive' Internet Resources Directory".
Note that Rousseau lives
again, in company with Thoreau, Bertrand Russell, etc.
The revolution in biology began in 1953, with Crick and Watson's DNA
double-helix. Less than 20 years later, Berg constructed the first
recombinant DNA. We had gene engineering, very public
soul-searching by molecular biologists, and mild government
regulation. By the 80's we had commercial biotechnology products and,
predictably, a Luddite anti-biotechnology movement, populated by
environmentalists, anti-nukes, the anti-corporate left, and whoever
else saw Green pastures in anti-biotech. The movement has been notably
effective in Europe, where it shut down agricultural development of
engineered crops. America is only modestly infected with these
people. The immediate consequences of the movement have been small for
us and Western Europe but perhaps deadly for many Africans and Asians.
Environmentalism (a la Ehrlich/Carson/Commoner), global warming,
anti-globalization, anti-evolution/anti-Darwinism (not new but
revitalized) -- all are arguably Luddite movements. They use junk
science wrapped around a core of good science to manipulate the public,
often through fear engendered by a picture that they present as likely
but that is in fact not probable. Refutation is difficult once the
Luddite view is widely accepted, particularly if it is encoded into
law. With time, however, as the public becomes aware of competing
interpretations, the Luddite view can be refuted or modified: we seem
to be coming to a more balanced view of nuclear power;
we eat gene-engineered food; the EU has begun to relax its anti-biotech
position; we have a few press reports in which anthropogenic global
warming is not considered proven fact.
Society is probably better for having passed through a period of Luddite excess.
Twenty-five years ago the Tucson City Council would not (could not?) have voted
to preserve the Bellota (A-7) ranch.
So there is room for hope and optimism. Yet we should
beware of imminent new forms of Luddite fanaticism.
The elucidation of the human genome, the expected rapid progress on defining
the proteome, the march of discovery through successive
levels of cell architecture and organization, all are awesome even for a
cynical old biochemist and biophysicist who finds the actual
science as pedestrian. Cloning of body parts is possible now; manipulation
of the human genome is possible in principle and will be done likely within
my lifetime; human-directed evolution of humans is not far-fetched.
What I prefer not to imagine is the associated conflict between groups
fanatically devoted to a particular truth,
like the pro- and anti-abortion factions of our time,
that are certain to seek to co-opt this future debate that will be
truly consequential for mankind.
Anti-computer movements and anti-information-technology movements are
not yet dominant players in development of the internet. There are few
restrictive laws or regulations. Online commerce is essentially tax
free. The web is like the government of Italy: a state of disorder
that works beautifully for its citizens. This can't last. States are
likely soon to tax, and the Federal government to legislate on web
privacy and incongruously, on limiting the power of crytographic
algorithms. There is a minor industry focused on on computer security
and web privacy. There are organizations that support legislation to
control what they see as abuses of the web. A newly-coined futurist
with impeccable credentials (Bill Joy, UNIX guru and co-founder of Sun
Microsystems) has suggested that scientists may be morally obligated to stop
work in the fields of gene engineering, nanotechnology, and robotics.
For a sample of the argument, see a
Wired article by Joy
and a refutation from the
Center for the Study of Science and Technology.
Arguably, we are in
the pre-emergence stage of a Luddite anti-computer-technology
movement, where the technology is advanced and has proven itself,
where leading scientists and engineers are publicly thinking through
implications of past work and future expectations, yet where there
is no organized high-profile Luddite opposition.
The latter may condense around computer security and privacy,
where there is considerable activity and some public interest.
Looking backward, one is reminded of the
anti-nuclear movement at its birth during the late 1940's:
leading physicists felt that they had "known sin" in the atom bomb;
some ceased work in physics; others entered the political arena;
few were irrational;
the Luddite anti-nuclear-power movement developed subsequently.
Some, possibly many personal computer users
believe that something fearful will happen owing to their having an
insufficiently high level of computer security, or just to their being
connected to the net:
inundation of their email account by spam,
destruction of computer files, theft of personal files, theft of
identity, theft of property, stalking, assault.
There indeed are
problems with computer security (a determined and informed person can
break into perhaps any computer), spam (pervasive), computer viruses
(common and destructive of computer files), privacy
(publicly accessible databases tabulate information most would want
kept private), crime (its certainly out there), etc.
However, these problems, where they involve harm to self or property, are of
low probability, and where of high probability, are an inconvenience (small
in the case of spam; easily avoidable in the case of viruses).
Exposure on the net should not induce fear.
Are we seeing already effects of a nascent Luddite anti-technology movement?
Openness and accountability in government,
in public and private institutions, in corporations,
is, I believe, understood by most
to be desirable, by many to be necessary, by some to be a moral imperative.
Privacy as a right is supported perhaps more strongly by the public and
is thought to be irreducible, absolute, and the basis of a free democracy.
In fact, openness is rare: political bodies resist and are forced
into divulging information (Congressional oversight, FOIA,
elections); corporations divulge little,
notwithstanding the SEC and tort
law; foundations appear no more forthcoming.
In fact, privacy, or at least its support in law, is as much a chimera as
openness.
Privacy encoded in Constitutional law is
protection against possible attack by the government on the individual's
freedom of expression, property, movement, or body.
Much of this body of law is recent (post WWII; Griswold, etc.)
and restricted in scope.
Privacy of personal information, violated through sale of voting rolls
or of databases of addresses,
etc., is not widely protected.
Perhaps it will be, in response to privacy concerns (Luddite?) generated by
web technology.
Should it be?
Government because of its power is a just concern:
consider a possible requirement that all carry a true identity card.
Corporation acquisition of data does not appear to be in the same category
of threat.
In a bargain that gives us convenience,
we choose to release our phone number for publication,
our credit card to a waiter or its number to an online seller,
our email address to friends or attached to a web posting.
I have not seen substantial abuse of my giving up, voluntarily, significant
blocks of my private information for publication or use on the web.
Anecdotes of abuse are unconvincing.
I am sure there have been cases of theft of identity,
or of burglary of a home by an internet-proficient thief, but until these
become widespread, which they are not at this time,
minimal precaution remains a safe option and allows me the freedom of
convenience.
To put the matter of privacy with regard to web exposure in
perspective, choose the outcome you fear most, assess its probability,
and compare its importance to the 0.1 probability of death faced by Air
Force combat personnel in the early raids over Europe in WWII or
by McCain over North Vietnam, or the less than 0.1 but likely
significant probability of death faced by a CIA or Special Forces combatant
in, for example, the recent attack near Gardez or the insurrection at
Mazar-i-Sharif.
Apples and oranges?
Perhaps, but the comparison serves to make a point.
The consequence of a violation of web privacy is not life
or death, but inconvenience. A low probability of inconvenience
should not block acting in accordance with an ideal of trust and openness,
chimerical as the ideal might be.
If you worry about web privacy, get a life!