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Bruce Schneier On Perceived and Real Risks
Posted by
Zonk
on Fri Nov 03, 2006 08:32 PM
from the hit-me-with-your-best-shot dept.
from the hit-me-with-your-best-shot dept.
prostoalex writes "Encryption guru Bruce Schneier takes a look at perceived and actual risks with some insightful commentary on how warped the public perception of risks may be: '...we worry more about anthrax (with an annual death toll of roughly zero) than influenza (with an annual death toll of a quarter-million to a half-million people). Influenza is a natural accident, anthrax is an intentional action, and the smallest action captures our attention in a way that the largest accident doesn't. If two airplanes had been hit by lightning and crashed into a New York skyscraper, few of us would be able to name the date on which it happened.'"
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Nice soundbyte there... (Score:2)
But I'm pretty sure if it happened on the same day and dropped both towers it'd be every bit as famous as the one we had.
Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
MOD PARENT UP (Score:3, Insightful)
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--Mr. Obvious
As an American... (Score:3, Funny)
As an American, I'm offended you think I don't know about Boxing Day.
It's the day you celebrate all the brave lads who died to keep China British.
Re:Nice soundbyte there... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Nice soundbyte there... (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
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Then tell me what was the date of the great san fransisco earth quake? do so without looking it up. It's only memorable because we have a huge species spanning problem with confirmation bias, distorted sense of risk, and we're in general gullable and stupid. Just see how a marketting partment made santa part of chirstmas and Diamonds part of engagements. The current American administratio
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Re:Nice soundbyte there... (Score:5, Informative)
No need for Data, Scotty, or Spock to get involved. The real explanation is much more mundane.
Debunking The 9/11 Myths - Mar. 2005 Cover Story [popularmechanics.com]
The original article lead to a book Debunking 9/11 Myths [popularmechanics.com], needed now more than ever.
The Conspiracy Industry [popularmechanics.com], By James B. Meigs, Editor-In-Chief, Popular Mechanics
Parent
War on ... (Score:2)
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Traffic deaths do not take out 2,000 people in a single incident.
Traffic deaths do not massively damage infrastructure or erase 50,000 high-paying jobs in a single incident. Traffic deaths do not kill a significant fraction of a city's first responders.
New Orleans may never fully recover from Katrina. There are damn few world cities as ri
6304 people die every hour (Score:2)
Clearly we need (Score:2)
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Er.... (Score:2)
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Americans actively supported the terrorism in Northern Ireland, of course that sort of terror was fine.
!918 Flu Epidemic (Score:2, Insightful)
more from Schneier... (Score:2)
A retired veteran and candidate for Oklahoma State School Superintendent says he wants to make schools safer by creating bulletproof textbooks.
Bill Crozier says the books could give students and teachers a fighting chance if there's a shooting at their school."
why wasn't -that- slashdotted??
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I wonder if something goofy like that (Score:2)
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Apropos, that Democrat has not said he is against pornography featuring deviant child rape by the terrorists burning the gay marriage flag that will cut and run the mushroom clound by raising your taxes while calling our troops DUMB. Nancy Pelosi as a speaker, ooooooooooooo!
Yep, Human Nature (Score:2)
You're more likely to be killed by a car accident than terrorism. You can take steps to reduce the odds, but they will always be there. With few exceptions though, the other drivers are not trying to kill you. Your car, the weather, or whatever it is causes the accident is not an intelligent being that "has it in for you".
So. Are people irrational or not? Maybe not. Terrorists, if successful, can destabilize the whole society. It hasn't happened yet, but in theory, left unchecked, it could. OTOH,
I don't know about that... (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
We are human nature: amen, brother (Score:2)
Add in greed, as in oil greed and thirst (it used to be water and arable land) and you get Iraq, as no proof has been forthcoming of any of the reasons we went to war there. Instead, we shot about $3trillion getting revenge for about 3K deaths.... this after we went to war for Kuwait and ru
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So. Are people irrational or not? Maybe not. Terrorists, if successful, can destabilize the whole society. It hasn't happened yet, but in theory, left unchecked, it could. OTOH, lightning
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The point of the article really
If our fears were in relation to the actual risk we face ( eg: take your car, or take a plane ), Terrorist would never be able to succeed.
Terrorist try to scare the shit of the people with a very local action and a very limited number of death. In the big scheme of things, the annual death caused by terrorism worldwide is much lower than the number of people murdered in 1 US city. If Terrorist were to succeed i
Test yourself (Score:2)
Perhaps it is about intentionality (Score:3, Insightful)
When people fly two planes into the WTC, and their fellow travellers express the intent to conduct further attacks, the human intention behind it is pretty clear. Accidents happen, of course, but generally people aren't *trying* to get into car accidents. The idea that people are out there dreaming up further schemes involving mass destruction is what freaks people out. Sure, the odds are still absurdly low that you or I are going to get whacked by terrorists, but human beings are deliberately trying to create the destruction. I think it feels much more personal when you realize that human beings are behind these events, rather than random chance or nature.
Or fear of your own depravity (Score:2)
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Humans naturally and correctly respond more strongly to intentional attacks than to accidents.
Accidents will happen, and at any given point they may be more statistically threatening than whatever deliberate attacks may be going on. But accidents are relatively constant, and societies work to minimise them. Intentional attacks, on the other hand, tend to have people working to maximise the effects.
There are people right now who would bomb every airplane in the world if they had the a
I have played with this for some time. (Score:2)
People will jump in a car and drive to the store. Then till you how dangerus it is to do X or Y.
What I would love to see would be an analysys of the number of highway deaths that accured becase more people drove and are driving futher and more often sin
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I could only hope that everyone on earth (Score:2)
don't forget profit (Score:2)
Perspective (Score:2)
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LLE (Score:2)
It makes interesting reading, particularly when you compare it to our perceived risks.
The Availability Heuristic (Score:2)
Essentially, that sums TFA up in two words. When something's drummed into your brain on a regular basis, your brain begins to classify it as being real or genuine; it's a more "available" scenario or assertion to you. While in this particular case it proves cause for a lot of fallacies about terrorism, and the media/politicians take advantage of it regularly, it's actually something you do as a way of survival (think Darwin); it allow
not sure i buy this (Score:2)
If that skyscraper then collapsed, killing 3000 people, I'm thinking we'd remember it. If not the exact date, at least the fact that it happened. Witness Katrina- an accident in which far fewer people died than on 9/11. Do I remember the exact date Katrina hit? Nope. But I do remember it happened.
Is it really so mystical that people would react more strongly
Fear of homocide (Score:2)
Summary of Lifes Risks (Score:2)
"Don't Worry, Be Happy" - Bobby McFerrin
* 2nd ref: footnotes [wikipedia.org]
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You will be perfectly safe in your jail cell, no doubt.
Plain old regular flu (Score:2)
I'd hazard a guess that more people are concerned about bird flu than the garden variety (i know it varies from year to year) yet they are more likely to die from the latter.
Would you really remember the date? (Score:2)
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A math professor of mine once pointed out that more people in the U.S. die each year from eating fast food than die from rabies.