Exposed: How Revealing Your Data and Eliminating Privacy Increases Trust and Liberates Humanity
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- About the Author -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Privacy Cases: Being Suborned -- Security Through Trust -- The Historic Trust Model Creates Oppression -- Privately Trustful -- Disarmed Forces -- Missed Application -- Harmfully Ever After -- Open Air -- Artifice Exemplar -- Chapter 2 Privacy Cases: Government/National Intelligence/Military Confidentiality -- National Security vs. Governmental Security -- A Government Is Not a Nation -- Rationales -- Rationale: Direct Advantage -- Rationale: Overcome Other Secrecy -- Rationale: Military Advantage -- Rationale: Hidden Diplomacy -- Rationale: Protecting Personal Privacy -- Rationale: Emergency Powers -- No Net Benefit -- Possible Net Negative -- Citizenry at Risk -- Bad Public Policy -- The Secret Police State -- Chapter 3 Privacy and Personal Protection -- Your Exposure -- Check Yourself -- Take Your Medicine -- The Scene of the Crime -- Totally Transparent Protection -- You're a Celebrity -- Chapter 4 A Case Against Privacy: An End to Shame -- Cultural Shame -- Location, Location, Location -- Beneficial Shame, Which Might Be Harmful -- Hypocrisy for Thee -- Chapter 5 A Case Against Privacy: Better Policy/Practices -- Policy Based on Bad Data: US Police and Dogs -- Policy Based on Bad Data: The DSM -- Bad Data Derived from Concern for Privacy: Suicide -- Counting Suicides -- Motivation and Reaction -- Famous Suicide -- Jumping on Guns and Bandwagons -- Chapter 6 A (Bad) Solution: Regulation -- Regulation = Destruction -- Legitimate Fear of the Private Sector -- Exceptions to the Rules -- Chill Out -- Power Outage -- Top Cover -- Now You See It . . . -- The Government Would Never Lie to Its Overseers, Right? -- Stressing It -- Chapter 7 A Good Solution: Ubiquity of Access -- If Everybody Knows Everything, Nobody Has an Advantage.