[Politech] Economist, Lessig want to preserve freedom by ending anonymity [fs][priv]

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Wed Dec 03 2003 - 06:05:06 PST

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    http://www.economist.co.uk/science/displayStory.cfm?story_id=2246018
    
    The issue boils down to the question of how much anonymity society can 
    tolerate on the internet. Drivers' licences and registration plates 
    dramatically reduce the incidence of hit-and-run accidents. Crack cocaine 
    is never bought by credit card. If everybody on the internet were easily 
    traceable, people would think twice about hacking. "I'm kind of a fan of 
    eliminating anonymity," says Alan Nugent, the chief technologist at Novell, 
    a software company, "if that is the price for security."
    
    The internet is heading in this direction already. Enrique Salem, 
    Brightmail's chief executive, says that all e-mail in future will either be 
    authenticated or be sent into a quarantined in-box where few will dare to 
    click. The sender's authentication may well be tied to a driving licence, 
    social-security number or passport. An entire industry has sprung up to 
    work on other forms of identification, such as the biometric scanning of 
    irises or hands.
    
    All this may not be pleasing to libertarians, who envisioned the internet 
    as offering individuals the cover of relative obscurity. What use is the 
    network to dissidents in China if the Communist Party is watching 
    everything they do online? And what use is the internet, whose whole point 
    was to connect people, if it is balkanised into separate, walled subnets? ...
    
    To preserve freedom further, suggests Mr Lessig, anonymity could be 
    replaced by pseudonymity. It might become legal, for instance, to have 
    credit cards for online transactions under different names, as long as 
    these could still be traced to the individual owner. The challenge is to 
    set the legal hurdles for online search warrants high enough so that 
    governments cannot abuse their power. But at the same time to keep them low 
    enough so that criminals can be found and stopped. In this respect, the 
    online world should be no different from the real one.
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