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Privacy and Security after September 11


# 26201
Privacy and Security after September 11
Discusses the meaning of the "right to be left alone" having significant meaning for the average person, given legal and political developments since September 11.
8,238 words (approx. 33 pages) | 186 sources | APA | 2002 United Kingdom


Paper Summary:

Our society needs and survives by information. The governments can rule and protect the flow of personal data when private sector is involved, but they cannot renounce to the decisive source of power of our society. The paper shows that the reduction of our right to be left alone was already an ongoing process. It discusses the forecast for a post-September 11 world, what the actual interaction between power, society and technology is, how privacy is threatened and what remains of our right to be left alone.

Table of Contents:

Introduction
Concept of Privacy
Governmental Surveillance
Authoritarianism and Technology
The Great Fear - Security Measures after September 11
The United States
Europe
Worldwide Scenario
Black Surveillance - Intelligence Actions and Projects
Surveillance Connection - Private & Public and The Global Database
The Daily Intrusion into the Average Man's Privacy
Protecting Privacy - Human Rights Advocates' Activity and Privacy-Enhancing Strategies
Conclusions

From the Paper:

"Different resources can be used to find if our computers are running spyware software: spyware lookup databases, such as Spychecker , allow to check whether the free software we are about to download comes with spyware software; Ad Aware from Lavasoft is a free utility that scans the memory, registry and hard drive for spyware; OptOut of SpinRite is a free software that cleans the system registry of spyware.
Furthermore we can route our communications through anonymizers which are technology permitting to hide our identity on line. Among the different resources available Anonymizer is an anonymous browsing service and its technology blocks cookies, Java and JavaScript, encrypts cookies, email, and Web addresses in the user's browser history and conceals the user's identity while the user chats and browses the Internet. Other anonymizing tools are SuperProxy platform System from Lumeria and ZeroKnowledge Freedom WebSecure."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Privacy and Security after September 11 (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 13, 2012, from http://www.academon.co.uk/Research-Paper-Privacy-and-Security-after-September-11/26201

MLA Citation:

"Privacy and Security after September 11" 15 January 2012. Web. 13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.co.uk/Research-Paper-Privacy-and-Security-after-September-11/26201>




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Published by:

GIAN GB
Publisher Since:
Apr 21, 2003
Degree in law at the University "Cattolica" of Milan, Italy (1999) Shumann Project in European Union law at the University of Castellanza, Italy (2000) Training contract in a law firm (1999-2001) LLM in Information Technology & Telecommunications Law at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, UK ( 2002-2003)
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