Nothing to hide the false tradeoff between privacy and security /
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
New Haven [Conn.] :
Yale University Press,
c2011.
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
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Table of Contents:
- The nothing-to-hide argument
- The all-or-nothing fallacy
- The danger of deference
- Why privacy isn't merely an individual right
- The pendulum argument
- The national-security argument
- The problem with dissolving the crime-espionage distinction
- The war-powers argument and the rule of law
- The Fourth Amendment and the secrecy paradigm
- The third party doctrine and digital dossiers
- The failure of looking for a reasonable expectation of privacy
- The suspicionless-searches argument
- Should we keep the exclusionary rule?
- The first amendment as criminal procedure
- Will repealing the Patriot Act restore our privacy?
- The law-and-technology problem and the leave-it-to-the-legislature argument
- Video surveillance and the no-privacy-in-public argument
- Should the government engage in data mining?
- The Luddite argument, the Titanic phenomenon, and the fix-a-problem strategy.