|
Were an information economy. They teach you that in school.
What they dont tell you is that its
impossible to move, to live, to operate at any level
without leaving traces, bits, seemingly, meaningless
fragments of personal information. Fragments that can be
retrieved, amplified
.
William Gibson Johnny Mnemonic
The virtual combination of the World
Wide Web and the Internet, known colloquially as The
Net has, over the past six to eight years, become more
a more pervasive element of our lives.
Of course, many would correct the previous
statement and say that it has become more invasive rather
than pervasive and in many ways these curmudgeons are
quite correct. The
Internet was built, or at the very least has grown on the
principle that the free exchange of information is a good
thing. Unfortunately
one of the first things that have suffered because of this
free exchange of information is the privacy that is one of
the foundations of our Constitution.
For those of you who were sleeping in Civics class
I refer you to the Fourth Amendment which states in part;
The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches
and seizures, shall not be violated
.
Now at this point it would be very
easy to launch into an attack on Government monitoring of
Net traffic and the legal basis for such tools as
Carnivore, the FBIs e-mail snooping program, but I am
not a Lawyer and this one time will leave such lofty
discussions to folks like my esteemed colleague John
Brewer. Instead,
I would like to take the time to discuss other more subtle
losses of privacy that are occurring on the Net.
I can recall a time when one could
post to a UseNet discussion, submit a form on a website,
or even register a domain name and not expect their in-box
to become flooded with a plethora of get rich quick
schemes and offers for free porn or hair loss
preventatives. I say expect their mailbox to fill up because
simply doing any of the three previously mentioned
activities will most certainly guarantee that you will
become the recipient of more SPAM than you can ever
imagine.
SPAM.
Ah yes, that lovely canned meat product brought to
you by the good folks at Hormel and much heralded by Monte
Python in the now infamous skit that proved to all of us
that too much of even a good thing is indeed a bad thing. While the merits of both the processed meat product and bulk
commercial e-mail can both be argued at great length I
think that in moderation both could be quite useful.
I suppose that like the meat product, I could
tolerate a few product announcements that I wished to
receive. Should
Amazon.com send me an update about a new book that fit my
profile, provided I first signed up for the service, I
would be fine with that.
What really irks me is the gang that sends me loads
of junk for things that I would never wish to receive such
as online investing or is it gambling?
Actually, I think that they are probably the same.
Lets face it; Sanford Wallace
ruined the Net forever.
To make sure everyone is up-to-speed, Sanford
(Spamford)
Wallace was the CEO of Cyberpromotions ,
a company that pioneered the use of e-mail for Unsolicited
Bulk E-Mail (UCE or SPAM).
This after his previous scheme of sending
unsolicited faxes was outlawed by Congress.
Some folks just never get a clue.
Ready to give
up? Chuck it all and just call it a day? Well
never fear dear readers because Bees will share with you
his patented, tried-and-true, never-fail methods for
cutting down on some of the SPAM in your in-box. How much
would you pay for
this amazing discovery? $99.95? $59.95? No! Thats
just too high! This
incredible and life changing information will be yours for
free, but it will have to wait until next time as I only
have space here for 750 words and I have just about run
out of
|