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Different degrees of threat. Google will chase you to try to sell you stuff. If CCP police are chasing you, it's probably for a more hurtful reason.
Google also assists those law enforcement agencies with plenty of useful info.
Do you think perhaps that valuing privacy differently from one individual to the next would have a net negative effect? If we're now also talking about threat assessments, that's another topic altogether, with privacy only being a part.
Yes, perhaps. It's irrelevant though. Trying to get everyone to agree to a universal set of values on life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is already hard enough. Privacy is even harder.
People have different opinions and value different things, they choose that all for themselves. They're free to do that, and it's fine.
My point is that I'm not sure it's a good idea to use those in bad situations as the gauge as to what about privacy is important. Doing it in this way, in my opinion, risks losing sight of the core reasons why privacy should be important for everyone. And everyone, regardless of their situation can choose, if they wish, to have as little privacy as they want. However, those who choose to retain their privacy should have the freedom to do so. It shouldn't be dictated by the masses. Do we just become nihilists when things require a bit of complex thought or aren't black and white?
The key part of this that is also opinion, is the "why privacy should be important for everyone".
That will be answered by the democratic process, not any single person's judgement. Privacy does not have any inherent importance from god or nature, we give it importance. We decide.
That clarification aside, I do agree with you. I also believe in privacy on principle. However, my belief is my opinion. What is fact is that it saves lives in more dangerous regions. This is more important than any opinion I could possibly have, regardless of how strongly I feel. My opinion on the importance of privacy is mainly based on my concerns for the future, which I cannot be certain of, not the facts of the present day, which I can be certain of.
Totally agree that it helps in dangerous regions (depending of course on the source of the dangers). I shouldn't be deciding on what level of privacy you should be entitled to. Democracy, or any decision making, whatever you want to call them that involves making decisions that affect many people will be a constant battle. Ideally we should be giving people as many protections as feasible, while at the same time allowing them to have autonomy to choose what's appropriate for them. And you're right, thinking about the future is something we (as the human race) don't tend to do enough of, leading to many short-sighted decision-making because votes. Nice chat, see ya round.