Privacy

by wjw on June 18, 2013

I’ve been considering the proposition that maybe privacy is a mid- to late-Twentieth Century concept that’s already proving obsolete.

Up until the 20th Century there wasn’t any privacy to be had, unless you were some kind of hermit that lived by himself in the wilderness far away from any civilization.  (And even some hermits wouldn’t have had privacy— none of that on a desert pillar, for sure.)

Hunter-gatherers lived in small communities,  in caves or huts made of twigs and leaves.  No privacy there.  I imagine Ogg and Thogg were up in each other’s business all the time.

After the development of agriculture, most people lived in farming communities and thrived on gossip, there being nothing else to talk about except crops and weather, both of which lack human interest.  No privacy here, either.

People from Scandinavia to Polynesia lived in longhouses— whole families sharing a big space.   Noisy lovemaking was entertainment for the whole community, adults and children alike.

If you were lord or lady of a medieval manor, you got a certain degree of privacy by virtue of the fact that you might own a curtained bed.  But you’d be sharing the bedroom with various family members and servants who would be sleeping on the floor next to you.

People who got together privately might well be up to something illicit, fornication or heresy or insurrection or fraud.  As the premiere theoretician of capitalism remarked, businessmen “never gathered together even for a social purpose save to conspire against the public interest.”

With the industrial revolution, we got people rich enough to build themselves palaces and mansions, which might have guaranteed them a degree of privacy, except that you need servants to maintain palaces and mansions, and the servants knew everything that was going on.

Surveillance by the servants was so ubiquitous that it just became a part of the background.  When you read of the genteel folk in Jane Austen or Charles Dickens or Honoré de Balzac, picture a servant or two silently observing every scene.  They were so taken for granted that the authors never commented on them.

People could send telegrams, but they were sent and read by third parties.  People could use telephones, but they were on party lines, and both operators and neighbors could listen in.

People left agricultural communities for cities, but they lived in apartments.  And every apartment that I’ve lived in had thin enough walls so that I knew my neighbors’ affairs.

It wasn’t until the middle class moved to the suburbs that privacy became possible.  The middle class could afford houses, but they couldn’t afford live-in servants to spy on them.  Nuclear families became just that.  Privacy was possible, though neighbors and local community standards imposed their constraints.

Or maybe you got just enough privacy to convince yourself that you really had a lot more than you did.

And now it may no longer be, not unless we go as off-the-grid as any medieval hermit.  Never use credit cards, never get social security numbers, never use the phone or the internet.  Pay everything in cash.

And that sort of behavior, of course, is suspicious, and might get you looked at.

So we may have no more privacy than Ogg and Thogg.  Except that the balance of power has changed.

Back when we lived in small communities, Mrs. Grundy may have known all about us, but we also knew all about Mrs. Grundy.  The balance of power was roughly equivalent.  If Mrs. Grundy denounced us, we could denounce her right back.

Now, the people sapping our privacy are big corporations and governments who insist on the secrecy of their own doings.  Information flows one way,  not the other.  We know little of the people who know all our business, and that leaves us no power, and little recourse.

My own privacy might be an illusion, but it’s an illusion to which I’ve grown rather attached.  I preserve it when possible. Though I’m a fairly public figure, and I chat here and elsewhere about those aspects of my life that I choose to label “public,” I stay away from a lot of topics.  My Facebook page gives an incorrect birth date, and very little other information.

But yet there’s that lack of equivalence.  The watchers have the power and we do not.

So let’s keep watching the watchers.  Because if I can’t have my illusions of privacy, I don’t see why they should.

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Two Surprises

by wjw on June 18, 2013

So, a free election in Iran in which the liberal candidate won.

And in Turkey, the prime minister is threatening to treat demonstrators as terrorists, calling for a new constitution, and threatening to send in the Army.

The world is full of surprises, isn’t it?

 

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Two Good Causes

by wjw on June 15, 2013

Hey writers!  The Clarion Writers’ Workshop is having their annual write-a-thon beginning June 23.  You write, and other folks pledge money depending on how much you write during the six-week period.  Everybody benefits, because you get something  written, and Clarion earns a few bucks.  Check it out!

A few years ago, I attended Launchpad, the science workshop for SF writers, in which I and a score of other writers spent a week learning astronomy from writer-astronomer Mike Brotherton.  Launchpad was funded by NSF and NASA grants, but those have dried up, and now Mike’s running a Kickstarter campaign at Rockethub.  Since I think it’s a good idea for science fiction writers to actually know science, I gotta recommend this.  Plus, if you contribute, you get books an’ stuff! What’s not to like?

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Police State

by wjw on June 13, 2013

Recent events, here and in the world, have me thinking about police states, and what they are and how they come about.

In Turkey, Prime Minister Erdogan— who has been democratically elected three times— heads a state that is increasingly authoritarian, and he is now depending on police forces to maintain his grip on power.  A new draft bill has landed on Erdogan’s desk that gives the Turkish intelligence service, MİT, police powers— except that while the police and the gendarmerie supposedly have to follow the law, MİT gets to make up the law as it goes along.  And also conduct operations in foreign countries— for the present, read Syria.  (Interesting that this story is in Today’s Zaman, which up till now has been a big Erdogan supporter.)

(And incidentally, the boss of MİT just got a visit from the head of Mossad.  Presumably they mostly talked about Syria, but then they’ve got an awful lot to talk about besides that.)

Over here, people are terribly shocked that the NSA has been subpoenaing the phone records of, apparently, the entire nation, as well as collecting everyone’s emails.  I’m not sure why people are being shocked now, since it’s been going on since the 1940s, it’s not particularly secret, and I remember seeing a Frontline special on PRISM (or one of its precursor programs) years ago.  (I guess I’m alone in watching PBS.)

And like, wow, my Verizon account isn’t secure from government intrusion.  Gosh.  What a surprise.  How so totally unlike Ma Bell.

I’m amazed that politicians, in particular, allege shock at these revelations.  The politicians voted for this.  Those on certain committees get regular briefings— which they’re not allowed to share with the public, but I’m guessing they talk to their colleagues.

And PRISM is only a continuation of various other NSA programs such a Ragtime, Stellar Wind, ECHELON, und so weiter.

I should point out that the NSA has been spying on Americans for decades, even when it was illegal (and I imagine that it still is, technically speaking).  NSA simply works through our allies.  Our friends in Britain, specifically the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in Cheltenham, run the world’s biggest electronic warehouse of data on American citizens— in a program run by the NSA, for all that the Brits are supposed to be in charge of it.  Australia and New Zealand also do a lot of spying on Americans. (Huzzah, lads, for the Special Relationship!)

The fact is that it is within the capability of any modern nation to create a total surveillance state.  Archiving phone records, monitoring the Internet, use of spycams and drones . . . none of this is particularly difficult for a technologically savvy government.  (I just got a bill from the British government for driving in London back in April.  Guess I should have taken the train.)

And it’s not just the government that’s to blame.  Private companies keep track of your name, address, credit rating, income stream, cellphone number, religion, relationships, family, social security number, even your food purchases.  (What do you think those supermarket discount cards are for?)  Facebook knows everything worth knowing about most of its customers.  Monetizing the metadata is a huge industry.

What’s more honorable and desirable?  Collecting people’s private data to make money, or collecting the same data to fight terror?

I’ll tell you what’s more scary— when both happen at once.  Microsoft’s new Xbox One is designed to spy on its owners.    It will monitor your heart rate, it will monitor your movement, it embodies facial recognition.  It monitors what games you play, what movies you watch, what sites you browse.  It keeps track of your friends.  And it sends a constant 24/7 video feed home to Microsoft, so they can watch you whenever they want.  (No more making out in front of the TV, teenagers of America!)

Xbox One is the TV set from 1984, the one that watches you.  Except more sinister, because it does more than just watch, it analyzes.

Microsoft has a preexisting relationship with the NSA, though they claim to respond only to individual subpoena requests.  But still, they cooperate— just like Google, Yahoo, Apple, Facebook, etc.  (Hey, remember when all of Apple’s customer data was found on an FBI laptop?  And people are still surprised about PRISM.)

So here’s the question.  At one point does the surveillance state become a police state?

Knowledgable people like Bruce Schneier seem to think the line’s already been crossed.  Me, not so sure.

It’s one thing to collect data.  It’s another thing to use that data to crush the liberties of the citizens.

I am old enough to remember certain things.  Being tear-gassed, being shot at by police (birdshot, fortunately, not bullets).  Seeing lines of National Guard marching across campus with fixed bayonets to clear away nonviolent protesters exercising their civil rights.  (And, for that matter, National Guard charging violent protesters throwing bricks at them.)  I’m not seeing that in my country.

What we are being denied is not our liberty— here I am blogging about this, after all, and the knock on the door has not yet come— but information.  As a nation, we don’t know enough about PRISM and the other programs to know whether they’re effective, how much they cost, exactly what information is being gathered, and what is being done with it.  The head of the NSA assured Congress that “dozens” of terrorist plots have been foiled through these programs, but we don’t get to hear the details— that’s reserved for members of certain committees who are sworn not to share the information with mere citizens.

We can’t sue to discover the information, because the government claims we have no standing.  And the Supreme Court hasn’t ruled on any of it, because we can’t sue.

A functioning democracy depends on a citizens who are informed, and a government that is transparent in its workings.  An enormously expensive, all-seeing surveillance program of which we know nothing has no business in our country, or indeed in the modern world.

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Deep State (of Depression)

by wjw on June 12, 2013

Once again I’m watching scenes from one of my novels play out on television, and once again I’m finding it depressing. Deep State was a novel about a revolution against an oppressive Turkish government, and now we get to see that on CNN— and to watch Christine Amanpour try to corner a Turkish official about exactly which “terrorists, radicals, and marginal people” are responsible for the violence.  (He had no answer, since it’s perfectly obvious that the overwhelming majority of the violence is on the government side.)

What exactly are the protestors upset about?

Prime Minister Erdogan has been elected three times, and is clearly the most popular politician in the country.  During his ten years in office, the per capita GNP has risen by no less than three hundred percent.  Turkey, unlike neighboring Greece, survived the world recession very well— in fact its rate of growth barely slowed.

Turkey is increasingly prosperous, and the prosperity is reaching parts of the country that have been poor since the country’s founding.  The country has a functioning, if flawed, democracy.  It’s far from a dictatorship like Libya.

Yet Erdogan— (and I regret that WordPress’s character set does not allow me to spell his name correctly) —is also prickly, authoritarian, and inclined to blame his problems on the conspiracies of (unnamed) evil terrorists and foreign agents.  He’s jailed dozens, maybe a couple hundred, military officers for a coup that they never actually attempted, and tossed reporters in jail on charges so transparently false that they’d be thrown out of court— assuming the reporters actually get their day in court, what with all the government-inspired delays.  He’s jettisoned the country’s tactical alliance with Israel, and is inclined to tell other world leaders how to behave.

Erdogan’s center-right Islamic party is also starting to police the nation’s morals.  There are new restrictions on alcohol which effectively ban its sale in many areas.  Public displays of affection are now discouraged (resulting in deeply charming “kiss-in” demonstrations being held here and there, at least one of which was met with violence).

So what happened to kick off the protests?  The prime minister wants to spruce up the nation for the centennial of the republic’s founding in 1923, and to that end he wanted to bulldoze the trees in Gazi Park adjacent to Taksim Square, the busy, crowded, chaotic heart of Beyoglu, historically the most Europeanized part of Greater Istanbul.  Gezi Park was to be demolished to make way for a reproduction of Ottoman barracks that had once stood there.  An Ottoman barracks to celebrate the Republic.  Or maybe Erdogan.  Or the Sultan.  Or something.

A few hundred protestors turned up, and the police charged in and beat the crap out of them.  So the next day, a few thousand protestors showed, and the police thrashed them again.  And the next day, when tens of thousands of protestors showed up, and the demonstrations began to spread to other cities, the police behaved predictably, and things got bigger.  There were protests in 61 of Turkey’s eighty-odd provinces.  Police repression in the capital of Ankara was particularly brutal.

There was a sort of truce for a few days, but early Tuesday morning the riot police moved into Taksim, and now it’s on.  There were some bonfires and molotov cocktails, but very possibly those were the work of police provocateurs.

And what’s it about?  Erdogan, pretty much.  His condescending, paternalistic style, his authoritarian high-handedness. Many of the protestors, possibly most of them, actually agree with Erdogan’s policies, they just can’t stand the man himself.

So I’m not seeing a happy ending here.  A lot of people, mostly young, with no leaders,  no unified ideology, and only the organization that Twitter and Facebook might provide.  Versus an old guy who can’t admit that he’s wrong and who sees conspiracies under every tree, because the idea of an open-sourced political movement just isn’t on his radar.

He should have just let the protestors go on till they got tired and went home.  After all, who pays attention these days to Occupy?

Instead we’ve got scenes from my novel being played out.  I can only hope Dagmar’s on the scene, and can figure out what to do.

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My Ebooks Are Live At Baen!

June 10, 2013

My various ebooks are now available at Baen Books, which I hope will help to find them a new audience. You can click to them via the ebook page, or head straight for my index page at Baen. Baen is also bundling some of my books into easy-to-click collections, including the Hardwired Bundle (Hardwired, Solip:System, [...]

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As The Knee Bends . . .

June 6, 2013

Kathy’s home from the hospital a mere two days after the knee replacement, and is getting along well on a walker.  She’s experiencing little to no pain, and was the star of her physical therapy class. Thanks to all of you who expressed your good wishes.  No doubt she’ll thank you herself very soon now.

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For Wild Cards Fans

June 6, 2013

I’ve been remiss in pointing out the recent appearance of a couple Wild Cards stories over on Tor.com.  These were both edited by George RR Martin, and they are free.  Free as in, y’know, just click and read. Cherie Priest, known for her Clockwork Century novels, offers up “The Button Man and the Murder Tree.” [...]

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Piña Coladas. Five Cents.

June 4, 2013

Kathy underwent knee replacement surgery this morning.  Which means either that posting here will be scarce, or that I’ll be posting a lot, since I’ll be sitting in a hospital room with a keyboard in front of me and little else to do. In the meantime, enjoy this amazing video of New York in 1939, [...]

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Chat About Writing and Food

May 31, 2013

Fran Wilde (Taos Toolbox ’12) interviews me about writing and food.  Check it out.

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