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	<title>Civic Studies &#187; privacy</title>
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		<title>Eben Moglen: &#8220;Snowden and the Future&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://bollier.org/blog/eben-moglen-snowden-and-future</link>
		<comments>http://bollier.org/blog/eben-moglen-snowden-and-future#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Jun 2014 18:37:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[David Bollier]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[free software]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Internet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[privacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surveillance]]></category>

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<p>The ongoing Snowden revelations about NSA surveillance have all sorts of implications for the rule of law, constitutional democracy, geopolitical alignments, human rights and much else.&#160; The disclosures deserve our closest attention for these reasons alone.&#160; But what do these revelations have to do with the commons?</p>
<p>If we regard the act of commoning as a genre of citizenship &#8211; acts of voluntary association and action that are critical to human freedom and democracy &#8211; we can see that snooping by both the NSA and its corporate brethren are profoundly hostile to the future of the commons.&#160; They violate some fundamental notions of human rights, civil freedoms and the ability of individuals to protect their privacy and thus their sovereignty.<img alt="" src="http://bollier.org/sites/default/files/resize/u6/Screen%20Shot%202014-06-04%20at%202.24.28%20PM-585x364.png" width="585" height="364"></p>
<p>If the market/state apparatus can digitally monitor our reading habits and telephone calls, email correspondence and purchases, physical movements and much else, then it has effectively snuffed out the sovereignty of a free people. The barrage of the successive Snowden disclosures has been followed by a relentless government propaganda war, cable TV denunciations and even attacks on Greenwald by the liberal nomenklatura (Michael Kinsley, George Packer). It&#8217;s as if "respectable opinion" did not care to note or defend the elemental human freedoms that a functioning democracy requires.</p>
<p>It was such a pleasure therefore to (belatedly) encounter a series of four lectures delivered last fall by Eben Moglen, a law scholar and historian at Columbia Law School, founder of the Software Freedom Law Center, and former general counsel of the Free Software Foundation.&#160; The four talks -- <a href="http://snowdenandthefuture.info/index.html">"Snowden and the Future"</a> -- offer one of the most eloquent and historically informed critiques of the Snowden revelations and their implications for freedom, democracy and &#8211; I would add &#8211; the capacity of people to common.</p>
<p><a href="http://bollier.org/blog/eben-moglen-snowden-and-future" target="_blank">read more</a></p>
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