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Privatization Limiting Access To Information 163

Knutsi sends us to the Federation of American Scientists' blog Secrecy News for a post on how privatization can affect access to research material. The blog tells how a Harvard researcher on the history of nuclear secrecy was denied access that would have been granted in the past. Some followup is in the comments to this reposting of the FAS story. "Los Alamos National Laboratory will no longer permit historians and other researchers to have access to its archival records because Los Alamos National Security (LANS), the private contractor that now operates the Lab, says it has 'no policy in place' that would allow such access."
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Privatization Limiting Access To Information

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  • by rockclimber ( 660746 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @03:57AM (#19049261)
    funded by public money, there should always be public access.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Holmwood ( 899130 )

      There is public access, via the Freedom of Information Act. The problem is, that's too slow and cumbersome for most researchers. From the post there,

      The relevant DOE procurement clause is DEAR 970.5204-3 "Access to and ownership of records" and it is in the LANS contract by reference in I-78.

      ...

      It DOES NOT require that the general public have access to either Government-owned or Contractor-Owned records in the possession of the contractor.

      It's not entirely clear whether this is the contractor doing t

      • by Vicissidude ( 878310 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @06:59AM (#19050065)
        It's not entirely clear whether this is the contractor doing this on its own initiative, or, more likely, the contractor legitimately concerned about being accused by the government of giving someone improper access. So, LANS seems to be playing it safe by directing everyone to FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) which is of course all but useless for students and many archival researchers.

        The researchers had access before the privatization of the lab. This whole article is the result of the privatization stopping the flow of information, which had normally been filled without FOIA requests up until this time. Presumably, the government would not care since they previously released this information when they ran this lab. This would not be a big deal otherwise.

        A very unfortunate state of affairs, but I'm not certain privatization is exactly what's to blame.

        Interesting that people will not hesitate to call government bureaucracy for what it is. But, when the same thing happens in the private sector, people excuse the behavior.

        This is corporate bureaucracy.

        Libertarians like to point out all the positives of privatization without going into the negatives. Here is one glowing example. The bureaucracy is now worse under corporate operation because the private businesses don't have to follow the same laws as the government. More than likely, we're also paying more money as well. At least government limits the amount that executives are compensated.
        • by Stile 65 ( 722451 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @07:19AM (#19050185) Homepage Journal
          Libertarians wouldn't call this privatization, either. This is still government-funded research done by government contractors. Libertarians would call this "corporate welfare."
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by Vicissidude ( 878310 )
            You have a public, government lab that was turned over to a private, corporate entity. That is the definition of privatization.

            Libertarians like to think that eliminating government agencies and turning them all over to private corporations will magically make those businesses more efficient and cost less money. That has often been shown not to be true, but Libertarians still believe it on faith.

            I'm sorry, but the Libertarian efficiency dogma is not always true. And in some cases like this, it ha
        • by OnlineAlias ( 828288 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @08:29AM (#19050739)
          I work as a government contractor in a similar situation. All I can say is that "we" as contractors don't have any data. The data is still the government's, and we do whatever they say to do with it. I suspect what is going on here is that the guys overseeing the contract itself are ducking and not doing their jobs, as it is easier just to say the government doesn't have control over the data anymore. Fact is, the government still has the obligation to manage the data, they are just lazy and are putting their jobs off on the contractor.

          It is not possible for the government to contract out government policy, as hard as they may try.
          • by Danse ( 1026 )

            It is not possible for the government to contract out government policy, as hard as they may try.

            They just get lobbyists to create policy for them for "free".
          • Fact is, the government still has the obligation to manage the data, they are just lazy and are putting their jobs off on the contractor.

            The contractor has taken over the responsibility for the entire lab. The contractor was there to take over the lab's functions. This was one of the functions, which they're refusing to do. Yes, the government should step in and get the contractor under compliance, but it is the contractor's fault for being out of compliance in the first place.

            At which point I hav
        • by bkr1_2k ( 237627 )
          The government may not care about who actually has access, but it's not up to the contractor to decide that. This is a standard situation when things go private. It will take some time to get a policy in place, but until then, research is slowed somewhat.

          Beaurocracy happens, that's no surprise. I have no idea what the relevance is of people's political opinions but I'll agree with the paying more part.
        • by mi ( 197448 )

          Libertarians like to point out all the positives of privatization without going into the negatives.

          Libertarians readily acknowledge, that a corporation can be just as (or even more) stupid as the government.

          Our point is, changing from one corporation to another is always possible (and usually quite easy). Changing the government, however — and I don't mean electing a different President or lawmaker, but revamping the government bureaucracy — is quite impossible...

          • Our point is, changing from one corporation to another is always possible (and usually quite easy). Changing the government, however -- and I don't mean electing a different President or lawmaker, but revamping the government bureaucracy -- is quite impossible...

            Oh bullshit. First off, you're not even talking apples to apples. You certainly can change from one government to another - leave the country. It is quite easy. Changing a single corporation is just as hard or harder than changing the govern
            • by mi ( 197448 )

              Oh bullshit.

              That's a nice opening, thank you very much.

              You certainly can change from one government to another - leave the country. It is quite easy.

              I already did it once, and it was very difficult. My parents, for example, still have not quite adjusted. I suggest, you try it — weren't you promising to move to Canada in November 2004?

              Going to a supermarket different from the one, that pissed me off, is much easier. Awarding a road-building contract to a company different from the one, that messe

        • by Azghoul ( 25786 )
          Libertarians who don't point out the negatives in any policy proposal are just as stupid as nanny-staters who do the same about their pet gov't projects.

          Fortunately, libertarians such as those are even more rare than libertarians in general. In fact, you'll find that many libertarians publicly state that private organizations given the same powers as government ones are the worst of all possible solutions.

          The fact that private organizations have the same bureaucratic garbage that drags down gov't ones is n
          • The fact that private organizations have the same bureaucratic garbage that drags down gov't ones is not a reasonable argument against privatization if you're being honest (on both sides of the argument).

            Actually, if one is willing to minimize the global amount of resources wasted in bureaucracy, one can very well argue using the argument you reject.

    • If research is or was funded by public money, there should always be public access.

      It's a good thing that governments have never ever researched nuclear weapons, otherwise they would have to post bomb making instructions on the internet. For those hiding in caves without internet access, they could send a self-addressed stamped envolope requesting the exact plan they would like.

      Dear America,
      please send me instructions for one ICBM [wikipedia.org] missle.
      Allhu Akbar, Osama.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
        It's a good thing that governments have never ever researched nuclear weapons, otherwise they would have to post bomb making instructions on the internet.

        Actually, the knowledge about how to make a nuke is pretty widespread. (Either fire two U-235 subcritical masses into one another at a high velocity to form a critical mass, or compress a hemisphere of fissile material with explosives.) It's making them small and efficient that's the secret now, but I don't think that terrorists/rogue states care much

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by Nuffsaid ( 855987 )

          Either fire two U-235 subcritical masses into one another at a high velocity to form a critical mass, or compress a hemisphere of fissile material with explosives.
          Ha! They managed to let you and many others believe THAT! Excellent job by the Secret Services. No wonder no rogue terrorist group managed to build one so far. They were all put on false track by this kind of disinformation.
          • Yes, exactly.

            If it were easy -- everyone would have one. Many countries like North Korea, have taken decades and committed massive resources to try and create a bomb. They have, with much of their nations resources on the line, managed to perhaps build 5 low-yield nukes. But the US spent massive research with the britest minds of the time on the Manhattan project -- and I don't think anyone has developed a Nuke without stealing or buying some of those secrets from somebody else.

            But proliferation has increas
            • by dpilot ( 134227 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @10:51AM (#19052585) Homepage Journal
              From what I understand, the problem isn't getting U-235 to go boom, it's getting U-235.

              You're quite literally sorting atom-by-atom, putting the U-238 in one bucket and the U-235 in the other, a 2% sort-by-weight problem. But really it's even worse than that, because one always hears about Uranium hexa-Fluoride, so it isn't 235 vs 238, you have to add 54 to each. That changes a 2.1% weight difference into a 1.7% difference. That's why they talk about thousands of centrifuges for refining.

              So from what I understand, some sort of nuclear bomb really isn't hard, given the material. Of course making a *small* bomb really IS hard, as is getting the fissile material.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Gerzel ( 240421 ) *
          Indeed.

          The knowledge of how to make a nuke also comes fairly easily with an understanding of physics on a degree level. Would you deny physics doctorates to anyone from a foreign country that might want to make nukes or support terrorists?

          Biological and chemical weaponry are the same. Anyone with a modern degree in the field should fairly easily be able to use such knowledge as is required for such a degree (and all the GOOD that can be done with it) to create a weapon of devastating proportions that I, f
          • Would you deny physics doctorates to anyone from a foreign country that might want to make nukes or support terrorists?
            Yes, if they were caught drinking while wearing a silly hat. [slashdot.org]
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Um, I'm sure it's a bit more work than that. Very few countries have ever been able to make a bomb.
          Most all of the countries now developing weapons got the information from Pakistan... and they got it from us. Israel is also a well-known country for selling off US weapons secrets whenever we sell them something (the USSR I believe, got theirs from Israel).

          And Homeland Security, actually DID put the plans for building nuclear weapons on it's web site -- until public outcry made them take it down.

          You make it
          • Um, I'm sure it's a bit more work than that. Very few countries have ever been able to make a bomb.

            The manufacturing part is actually simpler than getting the materials -- seperation of uranium isotopes or extraction of plutonium *is* actually quite difficult and dangerous. Then again, who knows how much of those materials are unaccounted for in their pure states already.

            You make it sound like banging two radioactive rocks together... yeah that's why everyone had to get their technology from someone el

            • "
              Polonium is needed for the neutron initiator in some -- not all -- nuclear devices.
              "

              >> I was talking about the briefcase nukes. It's a dense source of nutrinos and allows for the "poor man's bomb" like you are talking about. The Nuclear Initiator is the "big deal" in the weapon. Otherwise you have just have some really expensive nuclear waste. Of course -- I've always worried about a dirty bomb in a water supply.

              Your point is good about the "truck bomb" -- which is why securing the ports was essentia
      • Knowing how to build the nukes is the easy part. Getting the enriched uranium is the tricky part. (But if it were me, I'd hit the former Soviet Union storage facilities. Word on the streets is some of them aren't exactly secure.)
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Bios_Hakr ( 68586 )
      It does seem like a no-brainer. However, let's look at it from another, purely hypothetical, angle.

      Let's say you are having a wedding. You want photos of that wedding. You can take them yourself, or pay someone to take them. If you pay someone, only part of that payment covers the total cost. The photographer makes his money back by selling the photos of your event.

      Now, you *can* pay someone enough and they will just download the RAW images and burn them to a DVD for you. But it's very expensive.

      So, t
      • When I got married in 2004, I found a professional photographer that covered my wedding and provided the negatives for only $2000. Normally whenever you say "wedding" to any professional, they multiply their estimate by ten times. Certainly, we could have paid more for the photos and negatives, and probably would have with any other photographer. However, $2000 for eight hours of easy work is great by any standard.

        If you gave $1b to the right people, then they could come up with a working product. Ho
      • by Danse ( 1026 )

        So, the Government wants to research fusion. They don't want to hire all the scientists and fund the entire project. They just want to give someone $1b and reap the rewards. The problem is that it costs a company $2b to get a working product.

        If the taxpayers want it, they can purchase it outright. They should have that option. But it'll cost a lot more than an additional $1b. The company took the risk. If they dumped $4b and got nothing, they'd eat it. If they succeed, they should benefit.

        That depends entir

      • Yes, your scenario explains perfectly, why all our Weapons secrets have been sold to everyone else.

        Once the secret for say; stealth bomber is out -- the company gets to make a new, more super-secret weapon for MORE money.

        This would be like your hypothetical photographer, supplementing their income by taking pictures of your wedding night, and then charging you NOT to release them to the internet. Then going and selling them to some web site. You get divorced and hire the same photographer at your next weddi
      • Let's say you are having a wedding. You want photos of that wedding. You can take them yourself, or pay someone to take them. If you pay someone, only part of that payment covers the total cost. The photographer makes his money back by selling the photos of your event.

        Actually, it depends on the terms of the contract. If there are no terms relating to copyright, you get everything since it was a work for hire. That is why a good and normal wedding photography contract will spell out that the photographer

        • True, and IANAL either, but I can guarantee you any photographer who is worth their weight in salt has it in their contract (probably line 1) that they retain all rights to images. I know a couple photographers, and to suggest that anyone but them own the rights to their work would be tantamount to suggesting mutiny on a ship.
  • by mobby_6kl ( 668092 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @03:59AM (#19049269)
    If it weren't privatized, they'd just claim the information is a matter of national security and still refuse to release it.
    • by rewinn ( 647614 )
      Well, yes and no. The stuff for which there really is a national security interest would, and should be, secret. But what the historians et cetera were looking for were almost certainly not the real security stuff, e.g. how to make a nuke, but things about the development, e.g. budgets, tables of organization, organizational processes ...things that wouldn't be terribly useful to a terrorist.

      Actually, the problem with the article is that it doesn't characterize the data kept secret; it would be easier to d

  • In ... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Xiph ( 723935 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @04:00AM (#19049279)
    In fascist America, the company owns you (and your government)
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Xiph ( 723935 )
      Ack, i lowered myself into groupthink mode, and forgot to post as AC.
      oh well, karmawhoring is for gutless punks anyway.
  • by Hal_Porter ( 817932 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @04:07AM (#19049305)
    LANL does work on weapons. It seems like erring on the side of not giving out information will inconvenience some researchers but it might be a good thing for everyone else. And as someone pointed out, most of this information needed Q clearance even before privatization, which most researchers don't have, so the number of people inconvenienced is rather small.

    Given the rumours of spies from China getting hold of US secrets like the design of the W88 warhead [wikipedia.org] from LANL, maybe less access is a good thing. Seems to me that now that nuclear weapons tests are rare, it will be hard for other countries to make small warheads like this other than by copying an existing design. So stopping any information coming out of LANL is in the interest of the US.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Is security via obscurity really how we want to maintain our nuclear defense?
    • by Phroggy ( 441 )

      LANL does work on weapons. It seems like erring on the side of not giving out information will inconvenience some researchers but it might be a good thing for everyone else. And as someone pointed out, most of this information needed Q clearance even before privatization, which most researchers don't have, so the number of people inconvenienced is rather small.

      You're forgetting that the research being done by this small handful of researchers who have the appropriate security clearance may lead to all kinds of scientific or medical breakthroughs that could be hugely beneficial to the rest of us. So yeah, it's a rather small number of people who are currently being inconvenienced, but it might be a rather large number of people who will be missing out on something great as a result.

  • by Wizard052 ( 1003511 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @04:13AM (#19049329)
    Now it's all about policy and bottom line. That's privatisation for you. It works wonders with inefficient utilities and such but this? By placing such restrictions, they are nipping the very root from which such institutions begin.
    • By placing such restrictions, they are nipping the very root from which such institutions begin.

      BTW, Los Alamos began as a secret nuclear weapons lab. The people who worked there weren't even allowed to reveal their true address until the late 1940s -- before that, all mail went to PO Box XYZ Santa Fe, NM. And was censored coming in and out.

      If anything, LANL is returning to its roots, not escaping them.

      -b.

    • "It works wonders with inefficient utilities"

      It does? Like the wonders of rolling blackouts, higher prices and less service? I guess it does.
      • It does? Like the wonders of rolling blackouts, higher prices and less service? I guess it does.

        East Coast Reactionary:
        "Hey! Who turned the lights out?" *turns them back on*

        West Coast Revolutionary:
        "Hey! Who turned the lights out?"
        "Hey! Who turned the lights out?"
        "Hey! Who turned the lights out?"
        "Hey! Who turned the lights out?"

        It's a cultural thing...
  • Open Source (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hoojus ( 935220 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @04:14AM (#19049335)
    As a researcher in trying to integrate knowledge I find this more and more dissapointing. Where the research community is advocating a share model, companies like this come along and remove information from the public domain.
    This introduces difficulty as a researcher as this is now a void over which we need jump in order to create new knowledge. As more and more companies become contractors for the government it will ensure that not only researchers but the public will have to pay for information which may be necessary for the growth and understanding of the community as a whole.
    It is time for the government to realise that the public should come first and ensure that these types of restrictions do not occur in the future and if possible to revoke those that have already occured.
  • As a researcher, I can tell you flat out that the privatisation of information is putting up serious barrier to the work I do. Aside from prohibitively high prices on journal papers, etc, many old papers, experiments and historical documents are under lock and key, with the private companies that hold onto them totally unwilling to go to the (minor) expense of open up their archives. Such papers have effectively dropped off the face of the earth, and when those companies go under or dissolve or simply move headquarters, it's likely that the papers will in truth become lost forever.

    Try to find scientific articles or papers before about 1960. It's a nightmare. Aside from paying about $50-60 if you do find anything, finding it will be a challenge. Go back to the 50's and you're in trouble. The 40's is pretty bleak. You can find more papers on ancient Egypt than you can from the 1930's.

    It's possible that you can find old articles in Libraries, if you're willing to try about a dozen libraries. But many libraries are "downsizing" their paper collections(for financial reasons brought on by high journal prices). You can try an inter library loan but there are incredibly stringent copyright signoffs for every single item.

    Books are not so bad. Libraries usually have good collections, and book publishers don't seem to be as rabidly concerned with copyright as journal publishers. If the material you want is in a book, you're OK. The book can have been published in 1700 and you'll still be able to find a copy relatively easily, and cheaply. Paper's from the 1700's, except seminal ones, probably have all been lost by now.

    Private companies cannot be trusted to archive material. I really cannot put it plainer than that. If we place our scientific data, history and writings in the hands of private industry future generations will speak of a "Dark Age" in the 20th century, where apparently a lot was accomplished, but there will simply be no record of it. Our books aren't getting burned, they're getting privatised, a much surer method of destruction.
    • On the flip side. (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      As a researcher, (who's worked in industry and the university sector) I can tell you flat out that privatisation has helped the quality of research and pace of progress in the fields that I work in: physics and fundamental computer science. Competition and profit are strong motivators for many people.

      I do agree it can be irksome that you can't tell folk about your work - I've written more papers than I can count for my previous employer - they fill more space that a CD provides - yet I'll never be able to s

      • by lawpoop ( 604919 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @07:42AM (#19050369) Homepage Journal

        I can tell you flat out that privatization has helped the quality of research and pace of progress in the fields that I work in: physics and fundamental computer science...

        I've written more papers than I can count for my previous employer ... yet I'll never be able to show them to anyone outside of the company, or have them cited in public publications, because they're commercially sensitive and would be easily exploitable by competitors for profit.
        OK, so privatization helps the pace and quality of research... but doesn't that lead to duplication of effort, and a general stymieing of knowledge in the field? If you are doing some great research, but it only reaches other people in your company, aren't there 50 other companies who are doing the exact same research, but only keeping it internal?

        So what happens after a generation or two of all of the cutting edge research happening solely within corporations, who aren't sharing with each other? Wouldn't that basically put a halt to the progress of the field, since in order to learn cutting edge stuff, you would have to go to a company after your degree, and then you are bound up by the confidentiality agreements, and nobody can legally reverse engineer the fruits of your research because of laws like the DMCA?

        It might be faster than the university for a while, but after that while, it would seem to peter out to me.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Competition and profit are strong motivators for many people.

        What competition? The academic publishing sector is undergoing merger after merger. Monopolisation is a fact of life. Prices of papers keep going up an up. Profit is the main motivator here and it is directly opposed to the principles of research; open exchange of ideas.

        However, working for a private company does free you from the waste endemic in universities, and provide greater opportunity and increased freedom for many people.

        Waste in terms of

    • Re:Mini Dark Age (Score:5, Insightful)

      by alphamugwump ( 918799 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @06:22AM (#19049887)
      Damn right. If data is too difficult to access, it's the same as if it didn't exist. The Ark of the Covenant might really be stored in some government warehouse, and it wouldn't make a difference. To be easily accessible, data must be indexed, redundant, and digital. Which, practically speaking, means it must be on the internet. You might have some nifty search routines, but I guarantee they're not half as good as google. This is my problem whenever I try to search an academic database: their search sucks. Even if you have a general idea of the title, an article can still be hard to find.

      But more frightening is the rapid obsolescence of the physical medium. If you can't read the data, it also does you no good. Example: my parents recently mailed me a VHS tape. I don't have a VCR. Nobody I know has a VCR. My parents have a VCR. But when it breaks, there won't be any VCR repairmen left to fix it, or any companies making VCRs. They might be able to find something on ebay, but it would be a collector's item.

      What happens when all those microfilm readers break? Do you order a device custom-built to read your data? No, as important as it may be, it probably isn't worth it. That data is effectively gone. Every time there is an article about archival on Slashdot, someone mentions how durable paper is. Of course, stone is even more durable, but it has massive problems with storage density. And of course, there's the fact that nobody will know how to read your runes in a couple hundred years. Hell, a hundred years from now, we'll probably be plugging ethernet into our skulls. We probably won't be able to read anymore.

      Funny thing is, we (or my generation, anyway) like to think that the internet has always existed, and that every scrap of human knowledge is in there somewhere. It feels big, nebulous, and immortal. But try searching for things that happened before, say, 1995. Not big things, like wars and shootings. Try googling your grandparents. Or minor news, like some school being opened, or old radio shows, or something.

      It won't be there. And your radio station or newspaper isn't about to digitize all their archives, if they still have them. In theory, there's a record, but in practice, it never happened. Written history has given way to "internet history", just as the oral tradition gave way to written history. And it's like we're not writing down the Odyssey because the Bards Association of America will sue us if we do. So only information worth risking a DMCA is getting saved.

      Thus, Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons from the 60s are easily available. But the news? You're pretty much out of luck.

      • Those private companies could just purchase a Google search appliance to get that Google feature set without even putting it on the Internet. Of course, the digitizing is still a problem. That said, if you're willing to open the data, Google would probably come scan all your documents and index them for free for you.
    • I worked at Information America for a while.

      They buy up old news stories and archive documents. It is a vast repository of most of the data in news print in the past 100 years. They buy it on the cheap because most companies that create the articles, don't have a business model that can take advantage of archiving data. It will cost some money to get the information out.
  • shocking (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    duh.... Don't you know the whole purpose of the privitization of government is to end-around the constitution?
  • by adarklite ( 1033564 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @05:08AM (#19049559)
    Everyone is so quick to demand privacy, but aren't as quick to allow other entities like businesses, governments, and other organizations the right to the same privacy. However, privacy is a tricky issue. The US Constitution never mentioned the right to privacy and I'm sure that the founding father's would've found it laughable if someone mentioned it to them. We in America are guaranteed our right to live the way we want as long as it doesn't infringe on someone else's rights or on mutually agreed upon laws. Doesn't mean that the government can't know about how you live your life. It just can't interfere with it if its not against the law. I'm not defending any position mind you. But, if you deserve the right to withhold information from the government so do they. Not all knowledge is in your best interest.
    • by pionzypher ( 886253 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @05:42AM (#19049719)
      First off, I agree with you on your last point. There is certain knowledge that shouldn't be publicly available to everyone.

      That said, the constitution doesn't mention a right to privacy because the constitution was created to spell out the limited rights granted to the government. During its creation, this was clearly understood by those in participation. This is why the bill of rights was written later- the governmental powers were quite limited in scope at the outset and it was assumed that all else was in favor of the citizens.

      Some of the founders believed that there might be confusion regarding this, hence the bill of rights. Which brings us to amendments 9 & 10. The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people. and The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.. Thus, since it isn't written anywhere in the constitution nor in any of the amendments that americans do not have a right to privacy, we the citizens retain that right by omission.

      I also disagree with the founding fathers finding our expectation to privacy laughable. They were attempting to crawl out from under the thumb of the british empire. In fact, it would appear to me that the early workings of the government suggest that the attitude was more of a "to each his own" style. As you yourself stated "We in America are guaranteed our right to live the way we want as long as it doesn't infringe on someone else's rights or on mutually agreed upon laws."

      Finally, I disagree partially with your suggestion that the government has its own right to privacy. Public office? Funded by taxpayers? Not a private citizen? The government was intended to work for and in a sense be monitored by the citizens. Representation, accountability, those were what we were shooting for back then. Privatization and the ensuing loss/lockup of what was previously not public, but available to those with clearance doesn't promote any of these things.
    • The US Constitution never mentioned the right to privacy and I'm sure that the founding father's would've found it laughable if someone mentioned it to them.

      "Unreasonable search and seizure..." Things like electronic privacy and surveillance weren't an issue at the time, so they weren't written into the Constitution. It doesn't mean that the writers of the Constitution wouldn't have included a right to privacy, had it been a more major issue at the time.

      -b.

    • Everyone is so quick to demand privacy, but aren't as quick to allow other entities like businesses, governments, and other organizations the right to the same privacy.

      Businesses, I have a certain amount of sympathy for. Governments: if it's paid for with my tax money, the results of the research better be released to the public unless there's a compelling reason not to. (I think that nuclear weapons designs fall under the "compelling reason" umbrella.)

      -b.

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @10:36AM (#19052331)
      I'm not defending any position mind you. But, if you deserve the right to withhold information from the government so do they.

      Well, that certainly sounds like you are defending a position. And why does it have to be reciprocal? There are reasons why the government and publicly traded companies should be open that simply don't apply to people. It's like children and parents. Parents need to be able to know 100% about their small child. The small child doesn't need to know what mommy and daddy do when the bedroom door is closed. There are reasons for both, and the relationship isn't symmetrical. The government should be transparent. I vote for people based off their record. If their record is sealed (or the effects of their votes), then I am not an informed voter. Corporations that choose to be publicly traded must disclose financial information so that investors can make informed decisions. Corporations are also not people, and have no rights other than what is granted by the government (the opposite of people).

      The US Constitution never mentioned the right to privacy

      Sure it does. Read the 9th and 10th Amendments and report back what you find. I have a constitutionally guaranteed Right to Privacy. It's funny that those that claim to be the most literal interpreters of the Constitution just pretend the 9th and 10th Amendments aren't there (I'm not stating specifically you, but just those people in general).
      • @AK Marc.
        >> Amen brother!

        Corporations have no right to privacy -- nor does society benefit from them having such.
        The Executive Privilege of hiding everything has to be stopped.
        The whole notion of the Common Good has been stood on its head for years now. Corporations SHOULD ONLY EXIST IF the have a benefit to society -- not because they make a profit.

        I've used this same argument with Record Labels; they create a system where it's more beneficial for them to have perhaps 40 top acts, and to limit the nu
        • The answer is none. Now, it's an open question whether or not Brittany will still make music if she got no money for it... but it is doubtful that Nobody would make music.
          Most artists make all their money from live shows anyways, CDs are basically glorified promotional material.
  • privatization (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jovius ( 974690 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @05:27AM (#19049649)
    It's amazing how everything can be turned into a business.. The sad thing is, that the companies seek to protect their interests not the humanity's, which in the end pays for it. It hardly leads to savings, when the government functions are maintained by a mesh of private companies, which all seek to profit from the business of governing...
    • Yeah, and our public officials are unerring humanitarians who would never attempt to enrich themselves by doing something counter to our interests.
      • Lesser of two evils, mate. You'll get that from both -- I don't know about you, but I get a heck of a lot more of that from private businesses than from governments.
  • ...that the "private entity" shield is used.

    These [michellemalkin.com] people [littlegreenfootballs.com] take it all the way to the bank.
  • We shouldn't forget the spate of recent security lapses at Los Alamos. I think it is very likely that the new management may be of the opinion of "turn it all off until we get written direction from DOE."

    • Look, everyone's having fun using this as fodder for ripping on corporations. Stop being such a killjoy with your facts and logic.
  • by BillGatesLoveChild ( 1046184 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @07:14AM (#19050141) Journal
    DAFIF was a free listing of every aviation facility on the planet: runways, airports, navaids, beacons. One day the US NGIA who compiles it pulled the plug on public access. They said some 'foreign content providers' had claimed copyright on their portion of the data. Instead of distributing a partial worldwide database (which would be kind of useless), they thought "screw it" and dropped public access. Not just US citizens lost out on this, but the whole world did.

    Who did this affect? Everyone in Aviation.

    So who was behind it? They wouldn't say at the time.

    Turns out it was these little greasers: Air Services Australia. They did it because they wanted to rip off Australian Aviators, and they couldn't do that while the US made available an aviation database for free. This is one of these government organizations which pretends to 'privatize'. You get these pompous, stuffed-shirt public servants who think they built an organization from the ground up, when they were really handed something build from public money and said 'charge everyone'. So, Air Services Australia: Thanks a lot.

    http://www.fcw.com/article91698-12-12-05-Prin [fcw.com]
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DAFIF [wikipedia.org]
    http://www.airservicesaustralia.com/ [airservicesaustralia.com]

    Under the USC government doesn't copyright their products: citizens already paid to produce it with their taxes. In Australia and Britain, there is a long tradition of fleecing the public.
    • They still have a US-only version of DAFIF called USFIF. But that is going away in October of 2007. I wonder why -- lobbying from mapping software/paper map companies, maybe?

      -b.

  • by smchris ( 464899 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @08:00AM (#19050517)
    It all dates back to Ronald Reagan and the push to "run universities like businesses". That's when the privatization of university results went wild.

    By now, there should be a whole generation who has never thought of universities as anything else.
  • The privatized, government funded labs should be required to submit their research results to the Library of Congress for centralized, public archival. And be required to do so in a timely manner.

  • Contractors don't distribute data because they don't set policy, that's the government employees job. No employees you say? Then who's supervising the contractors? There is supposed to be some government over site, in not taking care of that over site somebody's not doing their job. No surprise when it comes to government.

  • by c6gunner ( 950153 ) on Wednesday May 09, 2007 @08:31AM (#19050761) Homepage
    It' just the next logical step. We've progressed from a manufacturing-oriented society to a service-oriented society, and are moving toward an information-oriented society. As goods and services decline in value, it's only natural for information to increase in value, and for people to start controlling what information they give out to whom.
  • http://www.ucnuclearfree.org/blog/bidforbomb.html [ucnuclearfree.org]

    I've been talking this up the past month... it's pretty outrageous to think that our Nuclear Weapons are now made by a for-profit company.

    Of course, right now, when GE wants more money to build props for Nuclear Subs.... they just leak the blueprints to a foreign company and our subs become obsolete and trackable. So the government shells out more money to GE for new props. Everybody wins!

    But this has to top the list of Greedy+Stupid;
    https://freeinternetpress [freeinternetpress.com]
    • Sorry, forgot to mention that some of the guards complaints, is that WORKERS at the BWXT Pantex plant were working something like 36 hour shifts. Yeah, people handling weapons-grade plutonium are taking No-Doze like an overworked Trucker.

      I'd be curious who they got to replace them... look at who they've gotten to work at Blackwater security. But hey, you know, what could happen if you hire a bunch of Armageddon-loving fundamentalists? I'm not saying that's who is doing security -- but you and I won't be abl
  • Los Alamos National Security (LANS), the private contractor that now operates the Lab, says it has 'no policy in place' that would allow such access."


    Their policy is "NO ACCESS".

  • First get an appointment with someone that can actually DO something, not a flunky.

    Second, explain to him that you are doing a study, and that their policy has created a problem.

    Third, explain that you have the right to get the information, and that their policyis no so much 'a problem' for you, as instead a delay for you and a serious problem for them.

    Fourth, when he asks why is it a problem for him, tell him that if you have reasonable access, you will only ask for about 20 most relevant documents, the

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