规范现实世界的监控

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW Washington Law Review Pub Date : 2015-10-27 DOI:10.2139/ssrn.2681128
M. Kaminski
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引用次数: 7

摘要

在现实世界中,有许多法律规范着私人团体的信息收集或监视。但我们缺乏一个令人信服的隐私损害理论,来解释国家在制定这些法律时的利益。如果没有隐私损害理论,这些法律将零敲碎打地颁布。立法者将很难向选民证明这些法律的合理性;法律将不能充分适应立法利益;法院会发现,将隐私损害与言论自由等其他重要价值进行权衡是一项挑战。这条规定了政府在制定管理私人团体监视的法律方面的利益。以社会心理学家Irwin Altman的“边界管理”框架为出发点,我将隐私伤害概念化为对个人动态管理信息披露和社会边界的能力的干扰。基于对隐私的这种理解,政府在制定禁止监视的法律时有两个相关的利益:一是提供通知,以便个人可以调整自己的行为;以及对禁止监视以防止不良行为转变的兴趣。以这种方式构建政府利益有几个好处。首先,它描述了现有法律:这些法律要么通过要求通知来帮助个人管理他们想要的披露水平,要么通过禁止监视来防止个人诉诸于不受欢迎的行为转变。其次,该框架有助于我们评估这些法律中立法利益的力量和合法性。第三,它使法院能够理解第一修正案的利益实际上是如何内化在隐私法中的。第四,它为立法者制定管理一系列新监控技术的新法律提供指导,这些技术包括自动车牌识别器(alpr)、机器人和无人机。
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Regulating Real-World Surveillance
A number of laws govern information gathering, or surveillance, by private parties in the physical world. But we lack a compelling theory of privacy harm that accounts for the state’s interest in enacting these laws. Without a theory of privacy harm, these laws will be enacted piecemeal. Legislators will have a difficult time justifying the laws to constituents; the laws will not be adequately tailored to legislative interest; and courts will find it challenging to weigh privacy harms against other strong values, such as freedom of expression. This Article identifies the government interest in enacting laws governing surveillance by private parties. Using social psychologist Irwin Altman’s framework of “boundary management” as a jumping-off point, I conceptualize privacy harm as interference in an individual’s ability to dynamically manage disclosure and social boundaries. Stemming from this understanding of privacy, the government has two related interests in enacting laws prohibiting surveillance: an interest in providing notice so that an individual can adjust her behavior; and an interest in prohibiting surveillance to prevent undesirable behavioral shifts. Framing the government interest, or interests, this way has several advantages. First, it descriptively maps on to existing laws: These laws either help individuals manage their desired level of disclosure by requiring notice, or prevent individuals from resorting to undesirable behavioral shifts by banning surveillance. Second, the framework helps us assess the strength and legitimacy of the legislative interest in these laws. Third, it allows courts to understand how First Amendment interests are in fact internalized in privacy laws. And fourth, it provides guidance to legislators for the enactment of new laws governing a range of new surveillance technologies — from automated license plate readers (ALPRs) to robots to drones.
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期刊介绍: Washington Law Review is a student-run and student-edited scholarly legal journal at the University of Washington School of Law. Inaugurated in 1919, it is the first legal journal published in the Pacific Northwest. Today, the Law Review publishes Articles and Comments of national and regional interest four times per year.
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