An American Privacy Emergency

(scottaaronson.blog)

97 points | by flowercalled an hour ago ago

10 comments

  • qrush 35 minutes ago

    This post's call to action is talking to your legislators, but it's missing a link to do so. Find yours here: https://www.congress.gov/members/find-your-member

  • aosmith 16 minutes ago

    I feel like I should just leave this link here...

    https://cipher.social/

    I wrote it, it's all F/OSS. It can never be monetized and that's the point.

    • cwillu 9 minutes ago

      The article is about the ban on differential privacy and other modern privacy techniques in use with the census and similar, not social media.

    • foresto 10 minutes ago

      > Direct P2P connections using Iroh gossip protocol over QUIC

      How does it handle NAT traversal?

      • aosmith a few seconds ago

        Multiple ways, some from the bit torrent days, some using public stun / turn servers.

  • greyface- 43 minutes ago
  • nl 30 minutes ago

    Related: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48517377

    It's too bad this has become political.

    I do differential privacy work for GDPR compliance and it's an interesting technology.

    • giancarlostoro 26 minutes ago

      > I do differential privacy work for GDPR compliance and it's an interesting technology.

      You mean legislation?

  • jmyeet 19 minutes ago

    Yeah, calling your legislators is going to do precisely nothing [1], just like data centers are almost universally opposed by the communities they land in yet they keep getting approved anyway.

    The true crisis here is in the captured political system.

    In the 1990s in Australia a racist, white supremacist party arose called One Nation through a very weird confluence of events that led a racist fish and chip shop owner by the name of Pauline Hanson to become a member of parliament. It was almost 30 years ago she gave her now famous miaden speech to Parliament [2].

    After some scandals, One Nation kind of disappeared for awhile, in part because the conservative coalition (of the Liberals and Nationals) basically adopted the racist platform in the early 2000s where asylum seekers were effectively scapegoated. But weirdly she's back now. Anyway, that part isn't the point.

    Australia has a preferential voting system, what tends to be called ranked choice voting in the US. You generally have two options on how to vote: you can individually number candidates yourself or you can use the registered preferences for a given party. In this case you put a "1" in Australian Labor Party, Australian Greens or whatever. A lot of people do this so preferences matter. Anyway, One Nation had a strategy of voting gainst the incumbent with preferences. So if it was a Liberal seat, the preference went to Labor and vice versa. This scared the bejsus out of the political establishment such that the opposing political parties gave preferences to each other over One Nation, leading to One Nation getting no seats in Parliament despite getting 10%+ (at its original peak) of the popular vote.

    My point here is that too many politicians and political parties view their seat as something that belongs to them. In the US primaries are treated largely as a formality by the parties for their anointed candidates. Re-election rates in Congress have sat at 95%+ for decades.

    What's interesting is that the Demoratic Party is almost in open revolt currently and over the past few weeks, several long-term (10-30 years) incumbents have been primaried by insurgent candidates.

    Here's a funf act I learned this week. It's been ~18 years since Citizens United basically got rid of campaign spending limits. A third of all the money spent since then has been spent this year on primaries. Thomas Massie has $35M+ spent against him in his primary, making it the most expensive in US history. Many others are in the millions. It's estimated that the total spending for the Senate seat in Maine will push $400M. For one Senate seat.

    All of this is a long way of saying that the only thing that will work is making these legislators fear they'll lose their cushy positions. And really if somebody has sat in office for 30 years and has nothing really to show for it, it's time for them to go.

    [1]: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/perspectives-on-poli...

    [2]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2ypTX9ntTQ

    • idle_zealot 10 minutes ago

      Agreed: sure, call your representative. If they're cagey or noncommittal, do what you can to get their ass primaried. Every "moderate" will absolutely sell you into a Panopticon.