snoopy wrote:Okay, I'll give you most of that. How would (do) material abuses play out, and how would those actions be protected against judicial action? (By material abuses, I mean instances that cause you a quantifiable harm.)
NSA employees are, for instance,
known to spy on former, current, and fantastical lovers. But when even the existence of the programs that the agents are abusing are classified, they are protected against whistleblowing by federal laws such as the Espionage Act that make it illegal to divulge classified information. (These laws have no exceptions for if the revelation is of government abuse, an unconstitutional program, etc.)
snoopy wrote:I assume that data collection requires some sort of servers... no?
You're confusing the tap with the wire. I'm asking you if the information flows through government wires, and all you've stated is that it flows through government taps.
snoopy wrote:Okay... back to the uniformed police in the adjacent booth - I think you've said that does yield a chilling effect, and it would be caused by a government agent - does that represent a violation of the first amendment?
It would depend greatly on context. For instance, if he were off duty and we just happened to be seated next to each other, then no. However, if he were on duty and intentionally sat next to me every day because he knew I came there to discuss my views on a controversial topic, then yes.
snoopy wrote:Here's my bigger take on this: I think we created a new "wild wild west" in the internet - a place where the law had minimal reach... I draw this conclusion by watching warez servers, then Napster, then Bit torrent, then tor and the "dark net" rise - people are using the internet to break the law basically with imputiy. All of these services have their legal merits... But then I see snarky comments like "if you're not using torrents to pirate, you're doing doing it wrong" and it makes me think of the mafia's shell companies... There to give a veneer of validity to something that is primarily used to (and, if we're honest, invented to) break the law. Now, revelations come out that our secret lawlessness isn't quite so secret, and it scares us, because the techier we are, the more likely it is that we used all that tech to steal.
I don't understand this angle at all. Out of everything that Snowden revealed, none of it had to do with the NSA using their capabilities to track down copyright violators, nor did the NSA ever use this as a justification for their capabilities. In any case, accusing people who support Internet privacy of having some secret motivation like protecting their copyright violations is pretty shameful of you.
The Internet isn't so radically different from technologies that came before it that it requires abandoning all established precedence for privacy. And in fact, for most kinds of communication, it is surprisingly similar. Making a Skype call isn't unlike making a phone call. In both cases, my voice goes from my phone to a telecommunications network such as AT&T, is relayed at different switches/routers/hubs, possibly even switching between networks, before going out the phone of the person I'm talking to. And perhaps more importantly, in each case, people have the same expectations of privacy concerning the call. Our current laws are more than up to the task.
P.S. it's not as though there aren't also analogs for your example of neighbors shouting at each other across the street on the Internet. For instance, that's what we're doing right now.
It's just not representative *every* kind of communication on the Internet, particularly the ones where we have an expectation of privacy and where the technology would otherwise provide it.