"I Have Nothing to Hide"
By Heidi Boghosian
By Heidi Boghosian
By Heidi Boghosian
By Heidi Boghosian
Part of Myths Made in America
Part of Myths Made in America
Category: Politics | Science & Technology
Category: Politics | Science & Technology
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$17.00
Jul 13, 2021 | ISBN 9780807061268
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Jul 13, 2021 | ISBN 9780807061275
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$17.00
Jul 13, 2021 | ISBN 9780807061268
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Jul 13, 2021 | ISBN 9780807061275
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Praise
âThis book does an excellent job at exposing privacy mythsâŠvery highly recommended.â
â2600: The Hacker Quarterly
ââI Have Nothing to Hideâ is a sweeping, yet direct and admirably up-to-date book on one of the most important topics of our time, and Boghosianâs effort to keep these pivotal matters on the national agenda is a praiseworthy, if all-too-often unappreciated, task . . . . Boghosianâs work is a clear call to re-embrace our privacy and value its place both in our lives as individuals and in a free society.â
âLos Angeles Review of Books
âBrings the big data problem down to earth with practical talk and anecdotes for citizens and policymakers.â
âFTCWatch
âBlatant misinformation can be easy to spot and debunk. What Heidi Boghosian dispels here are more insidious and more important: the core myths regarding data and privacy that quietly coalesce into conventional wisdoms. By unpacking the most pervasive and pernicious misconceptions, Boghosian leaves readers better informed about the modern surveillance state and better equipped to do something about it.â
âNathan Fuller, director, Courage Foundation
âThe first time I opened this book, I audibly squealed in delight. The persistent privacy myths that Boghosian exposes are the torment of every privacy advocateâs existence. She eviscerates each one with style. Melding important tech and policy history with personal stories and current events, this book is for anyone who wants to lay to rest the most persistent and damaging myth: that we should give up on our privacy altogether.â
âAlison Macrina, director, Library Freedom Project
âHeidi Boghosianâs book clearly and concisely tears down the lies we tell ourselves when it comes to the dark underbelly of technology as it relates to surveillance. Privacy is a right, and we need leaders like Heidi to tell us how to defend it from entities that purport to protect and serve us.â
âRachel A. Pickens, executive director, National Police Accountability Project
Table Of Contents
Introduction
PART ONE: PERSONAL AND NATIONAL SECURITY
MYTH 1
âSmart homes are more secureâ
MYTH 2
âI have nothing to hide, so I have nothing to fearâ
MYTH 3
âEncryption and anonymity toolsâthose are for terrorists!â
MYTH 4
âWe should worry about government, not corporate, surveillanceâ
MYTH 5
âThe USA doesnât have national ID numbersâ
MYTH 6
âSurveillance drones are just for warâ
MYTH 7
âSurveillance makes the nation saferâ
PART TWO: PROTECTIONS AND IMMUNITIES
MYTH 8
âNo one wants to spy on kidsâ
MYTH 9
âPolice donât monitor social mediaâ
MYTH 10
âBiometrics technologies are foolproofâ
MYTH 11
âMetadata doesnât reveal much about meâ
MYTH 12
âThe constitution protects reporters and their sourcesâ
MYTH 13
âThe attorneyâclient privilege is sacrosanctâ
MYTH 14
âThey canât design devices and platforms for privacyâ
MYTH 15
âCongress and courts protect us from surveillanceâ
PART THREE: IMPACT ON AUTONOMY, COMMUNITY, AND SOCIETY
MYTH 16
âSurveillance doesnât influence how I actâ
MYTH 17
âTeenagers donât care about privacyâ
MYTH 18
âSurveillance affects everyone equallyâ
MYTH 19
ââIf You See Something, Say Somethingâ is a civic dutyâ
MYTH 20
âSurveillance canât predict future behaviorâ
MYTH 21
âThereâs nothing I can do to stop surveillanceâ
Surveillance and Privacy Timeline
Acknowledgments
Notes