Florida Senator and national embarrassment Mel Martinez To Retire.
Should be quite a race to succeed him in both parties. I look forward to the blogger outreach….
Florida Senator and national embarrassment Mel Martinez To Retire.
Should be quite a race to succeed him in both parties. I look forward to the blogger outreach….
I just posted Identity Cards and Identity Romanticism to SSRN. A slightly modified version will appear as a chapter in Ian Kerr's edited collection “Lessons from the Identity Trail: Anonymity, Privacy and Identity in a Networked Society” (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009).
Here's the abstract:
This book chapter for “Lessons from the Identity Trail: Anonymity, Privacy and Identity in a Networked Society” (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009) — a forthcoming comparative examination of approaches to the regulation of anonymity edited by Ian Kerr — discusses the sources of hostility to National ID Cards in common law countries. It traces that hostility in the United States to a romantic vision of free movement and in England to an equally romantic vision of the 'rights of Englishmen'.
Governments in the United Kingdom, United States, Australia, and other countries are responding to perceived security threats by introducing various forms of mandatory or nearly mandatory domestic civilian national identity documents. This chapter argues that these ID cards pose threats to privacy and freedom, especially in countries without strong data protection rules. The threats created by weak data protection in these new identification schemes differ significantly from previous threats, making the romantic vision a poor basis from which to critique (highly flawed) contemporary proposals.
Although the length limits for the book made me cut the paper in half from its original size, I enjoyed working on the project; there are some real issues here and I don't think I've gotten to the bottom of them yet.
ID cards remain one of my main scholarly interests at present, and I expect to write much more about them. I would blog more about it, but I haven't figured out how to blog about my works in progress without the blog time cutting into work time. I find if I blog about non-work stuff it feels like a break; it's my hobby, it's a conversation (or howling into the wind, as the case may be). If I blog about work stuff, I feel a greater need to be scholarly and precise, it takes a long time, and it ends up sucking energy from what I see as my main job.
Over the weekend, I posted drafts of two chapters I wrote for a forthcoming book on anonymity and privacy around the world. Here's the back story on Anonymity and the Law in the United States.
I had originally agreed to write one piece — Identity Cards and Identity Romanticism — and then the book's editor, the incomparably wonderful Ian Kerr, asked me to write a survey of US law on anonymity. I thought it would be do-able, and I very much wanted to repay Ian for all his many kindnesses over the years.
But it wasn't easy. The problem wasn't so much that the US law in the area is chaotic, I'm used to that. Nor was it mainly that (after I'd agreed) they sent me an outline of the topic they hoped I would cover, a list which went well outside my comfort zone into areas like criminal procedure and juries, because I'm up for learning new things. No, the problem was the @#$@# word limit. I had to compress everything into tiny little spaces. I hated doing that. I found it excruciating, in fact. And it results in generalizations which while not, I hope, erroneous are on occasion not as precise as I'd ideally like.
Anonymity and the Law in the United States
This book chapter for “Lessons from the Identity Trail: Anonymity, Privacy and Identity in a Networked Society” (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009) — a forthcoming comparative examination of approaches to the regulation of anonymity edited by Ian Kerr — surveys the patchwork of U.S. laws regulating anonymity and concludes the overall U.S. policy towards anonymity remains primarily situational, largely reactive, and slowly evolving.
Anonymous speech, particularly on political or religious matters, enjoys a privileged position under the U.S. Constitution. Regulation of anonymous speech requires a particularly strong justification to survive judicial review but no form of speech is completely immune from regulation. Anonymity is presumptively disfavored for witnesses, defendants, and jurors during criminal trials; the regulation of anonymity in civil cases is more complex. Plaintiffs demonstrating sufficiently good cause may proceed anonymously; conversely, defendants with legitimate reasons may be able to shield their identities from discovery.
Despite growing public concern about privacy issues, the United States federal government has developed a number of post 9/11 initiatives designed to limit the scope of anonymous behavior and communication. Even so, the background norm that the government should not be able to compel individuals to reveal their identity without real cause retains force. On the other hand, legislatures and regulators seem reluctant to intervene to protect privacy, much less anonymity, from what are seen as market forces. Although the law imposes few if any legal obstacles to the domestic use of privacy-enhancing technology such as encryption it also requires little more than truth in advertising for most privacy destroying technologies.
I do think there's some value to a survey like this, especially in a collection where it will appear right next to similar surveys from lawyers in other countries. So I'm not sorry to have done it. But it's a little more of a laundry list than my usual work.
Harold Feld is the guy I read when I want to understand what's what in communications policy.
Here's his guide to what he calls “the terrain at the FCC”
What Next For The FCC? Beats the Heck Out of Me — So I'll Just Describe the Terrain … I can describe one thing with some certainty, the terrain at the FCC. Or, more accurately, I can describe the uncertainty around that terrain and how it will likely effect policy. In addition to the power to designate the Chairman, Obama may be looking at appointing no commissioners (very unlikely), one commissioner (reasonably likely), two commissioners (also likely), or three commissioners (unlikely). This uncertainty makes it very hard to predict what happens with the FCC next year. To add to the lack of clarity, the DTV transition occurring in February will pretty much suck up all the attention for the first two months — possibly more if it goes really badly. Add to this the significant turn over in both the House and the Senate Commerce Committees, with accompanying likely changes in staff, and you have a cloud of uncertainty powerful enough to obscure any crystal ball.
And then he does scenarios…