The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Mon Dec 01 2008
Columns
Molly Ivins

Too much information
June 8, 2000

AUSTIN, Texas -- At the mythical Fearmonger's Shoppe ("Serving all your phobia needs") in Lake Wobegon last week, there was a special on ways to prevent your early death from the frightful menace of bad handwriting by doctors. A puzzled pharmacist studies an impenetrable prescription and mutters: "Hmm, hmm, looks like 50 milligrams arsenic ... odd. ... Oh well") and you go home. In eight hours, you're lying in a huge refrigerator and your family is planning the memorial service.

Poor penmanship among doctors is estimated to cause as many as 198,000 deaths a year. I bring this up because my reaction to this wonderful whimsy was, "I bet it's happened." And that brings us to the most useful paranoia in our public life: growing concerns about privacy.

Paranoia has its uses, and the good news is that our well-justified paranoia about people collecting information about us is finally beginning to make the politicians stir. Unfortunately, it will have to get a lot worse before it moves the pols beyond their gratitude for big campaign contributions from the high-tech industry. The dirty little secret of the information age is that what it sells is information, and information about us is where much of its profit will come.

In addition to the Internet, financial companies and health-insurance companies are big on snooping around and seeing what they can collect on us, with obvious and catastrophic consequences. Most companies use the information for commercial purposes -- they can target our wine-buying habits, our clothes-buying habits, our book-buying habits, our music-buying habits. All the better to sell us more stuff. Buy on the Web, and watch three dozen catalogues arrive in your mail and 200 junk e-mail messages show up in just a few weeks.

This is not to mention outright criminal misuse of information -- people who can steal your identity, access your credit cards and clean out your bank account. Information about your prescriptions or your travel plans can be sold. Stalkers have used the Net. Big Brother is here. Pep up your paranoia now.

The political reaction to all this is quite interesting. The Federal Trade Commission came out in May with proposals for some fairly tough new privacy rules on the Internet. But lo and behold, industry groups and the Republicans in Congress (happy recipients of mucho dinero from high-tech groups) promptly announced that nothing needs to be done.

The industry's promises to self-regulate are a joke. The FTC found that only 20 percent of major companies on the Internet have adequate standards for protecting privacy.

The FTC wants to regulate the kinds of notices that consumers are given about the fact that information about them is being collected and sold, and to allow people to block the use of that information. The FTC proposes to establish rules for keeping information private from third parties, like private detectives who use the Net. And it wants to be able to penalize companies that violate privacy rules.

Fortunately, this is a political issue that R's and D's can join together on. Some of our conservative friends with that nice libertarian streak -- New York Times columnist William Safire among them -- are hot on the case.

The key words you want to remember are "opt in" and "opt out." What we want is a system where you have to opt in -- that is, give your permission -- before any information about you can be passed along. Giving people the opt-out option, which is the trick that Sen. Phil Gramm pulled in the big banking bill, is useless.

How many people are going to call or write and say, "Don't use my information," when they don't even know that information about them is being collected and sold? We should also have the right to know what information about us is being passed around.

Molly Ivins is a columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2000 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Email this article to a friend




1240 Bryden Road Columbus, Ohio 43209 Ph/Fx 614.253.2571 Email truth@freepress.org
  

Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008

Molly Ivins

"Credit where it's due: Clinton managed to accomplish a few things, despite others and himself"
  December 31, 2000

"The year 200 and American democracy"
  December 28, 2000

"Last minute Christmas gifts for us"
  December 24, 2000

"Christmas book list"
  December 21, 2000

"A village without its idiot"
  December 19, 2000

"Forgive but don't forget "
  December 17, 2000

"Some interesting stuff about the stock market "
  December 15, 2000

"Now is the time for all good men and women to come to the aid of their country"
  December 3, 2000

"The Bad Behavior Fiesta Bowl continues"
  November 28, 2000

"Beware the clumped chad"
  November 23, 2000

"Honest to Pete, this is historic "
  November 22, 2000

"Eat my chad "
  November 21, 2000

"Fearless champion of the underdog"
  November 20, 2000

"See it from the other side"
  November 19, 2000

"It’s not a recount -- it was actually a re-tally "
  November 12, 2000

"But daddy, you said I could be president!"
  November 5, 2000

"The poor kids are screwed again "
  November 2, 2000

"I (don't) feel your pain"
  October 31, 2000

"In dreams begins responsibility"
  October 29, 2000

"Why I'm voting for Ralph"
  October 26, 2000

"How dare they call him stupid"
  October 24, 2000

"Will the real Al Gore please stand up"
  October 22, 2000

"Liar, liar"
  October 19, 2000

"Military spending makes Molly MAD"
  October 17, 2000

"No one can stand either one of them "
  October 12, 2000

"The sport of naming judges"
  October 5, 2000

"The criminalization of politics"
  October 3, 2000

"Stretching the truth"
  October 1, 2000

"The textbook campaign"
  September 17, 2000

"Just don't get sick"
  September 14, 2000

"FBI - Fibbers Bureau of Investigation"
  September 12, 2000

"Are the upright primates too dumb to survive?"
  September 10, 2000

"End social promotion -- defeat Bush?"
  September 7, 2000

"A mostly forgotten labor tale of 19th century "
  September 1, 2000

"Before Texas spends more on prisons, let's think"
  August 31, 2000

"Oral arguments"
  August 29, 2000

"Story of a survivor"
  August 24, 2000

"Humanizing Al Gore "
  August 22, 2000

"Democratic steak and Republican pink clouds"
  August 20, 2000

"Is that a missile or a mylar balloon?"
  August 15, 2000

"Taking a surreality check in the great state"
  August 13, 2000

"How 'bout the good ol' days of regulation without the "de"?"
  August 10, 2000

"The man they call “Bush’s brain”"
  August 7, 2000

"A few suggestions for the Republican operatives"
  August 6, 2000

"White People Can't Clap On Beat "
  August 3, 2000

"Aren't we all tired of attack politics?"
  July 30, 2000

"Who deserves credit for Texas?"
  July 27, 2000

"Is "Republican tax break for the rich" simply redundant?"
  July 23, 2000

"Proud of Texas Committee"
  July 20, 2000

"Would that be thin and crispy or thick and chewy?"
  July 18, 2000

"And how are things down there in Texas?"
  July 16, 2000

"Nader, Nader, he's our man"
  July 13, 2000

"The dog that did NOT bark in the night is the key to the case "
  July 11, 2000

"See how clean our factory is, see the good lighting, see the happy workers "
  July 9, 2000

"God gave you a brain and meant you to use it"
  June 27, 2000

"The answer is blowin' in the wind"
  June 24, 2000

"A mock-ery of a death penalty trial"
  June 21, 2000

"Virtues and values"
  June 20, 2000

"Estate tax relief for the (poor little old) rich folks"
  June 15, 2000

"We the corporation of the United States. . . "
  June 13, 2000

"The magic numbers are 5-2-7"
  June 11, 2000

"Too much information"
  June 8, 2000

"Texas, warts and all"
  June 6, 2000

"Texans do not have full access to the courts"
  June 2, 2000

"Denial is not just a river"
  May 31, 2000

"Why is Bush so starry-eyed?"
  May 28, 2000

"Social (In)Security"
  May 23, 2000

"Abuse at Carswell Prison is for real"
  May 21, 2000

"For a good time (and political favors), call . . ."
  May 18, 2000

"Easy access to guns causes children's deaths"
  May 16, 2000

"Ethanol and NPR - enough to gag a maggot"
  May 11, 2000

"Aggressive entrepreneurs” or white collar criminals?"
  May 9, 2000

"Trade with China debate"
  May 4, 2000

"Tacky T-shirts and Texas politics"
  May 2, 2000

"Prison riots wait for no presidential candidate"
  April 30, 2000

"Yes, Virginia, there was a warrant"
  April 25, 2000

"The Easter season"
  April 23, 2000

"Raising Cain"
  April 20, 2000

"Sorry about the Buddhist temple thing"
  April 13, 2000

"Capitalism is O.K. - as long as you're not poor"
  April 11, 2000

"The Elian crisis - it's the coffee"
  April 9, 2000

"Politics and money "
  April 7, 2000

"Paradise lost to Prop. 13"
  April 4, 2000

"The FARC farce"
  March 28, 2000

"Big cheese endorses George Dubya"
  March 21, 2000

"Save gas, ride with a friend"
  March 16, 2000

"Tribute to a country banker with a heart"
  March 14, 2000

"...And if the government is failing, don"
  March 12, 2000

"The party's over"
  March 9, 2000

"Republicans for clean air?"
  March 5, 2000

"Granny D and campaign finance reform"
  March 2, 2000

"George W. needs an HMO to fix his growing nose"
  February 29, 2000

"The real war is not the fighting words of the primary campaign"
  February 24, 2000

"Bush "Pioneers" creative campaign fund-raising "
  February 8, 2000

"Alan Greenspan of Sunnybrook Farm"
  February 6, 2000

"Are you paying your fair share in political campaign contributions?"
  February 3, 2000

"A primary on today's politics "
  February 1, 2000

"Iowa was lots of fun, but there’s more to come"
  January 27, 2000

"Sticking to Bush’s message of the day"
  January 25, 2000

"System of justice shutdown"
  January 13, 2000

"Y2K Bug and other paranoia"
  January 11, 2000

"The Democratic presidential contest"
  January 6, 2000

"Happpy new millennium"
  January 4, 2000

"Eternal vigilance is the price of ... "
  January 2, 2000

"The oratory sweepstakes "
  January 2, 2000




Read Articles by Year:
2007 2006 2005 2004
2003 2002 2001 2000




All content © 1970-2008
The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer