#Tor, where the human rights to due process, confront accuser, fair trial & protection of law go to die because "privacy" & "anonymity"
— David Golumbia (@dgolumbia) September 4, 2016
@dgolumbia Privacy emphasis of libertechians tends to denigrate civil rights because these are rites sustained by publicity/public politics.
— Dale Carrico (@dalecarrico) September 4, 2016
@dalecarrico & by some very selfish & privileged desires
— David Golumbia (@dgolumbia) September 4, 2016
@dgolumbia Of course: disavow the civic peer and agency becomes a paranoid aggressive project of ruggedizing individualism in cyborg shells.
— Dale Carrico (@dalecarrico) September 4, 2016
@dalecarrico So, tor is basically cars? @dgolumbia
— Preston Austin (@gl33p) September 4, 2016
@gl33p @dgolumbia I'd say there are indeed key continuities in the delusive rugged-individualizing tech rhet peddling cars, guns and crypto.
— Dale Carrico (@dalecarrico) September 4, 2016
@dalecarrico @gl33p never forget: "encryption is the second amendment for the internet" https://t.co/8tm4chbkgA
— David Golumbia (@dgolumbia) September 4, 2016
@dgolumbia @gl33p I think the 2nd amend should be seen as a constitutional guarantee of accountable and representative policing...
— Dale Carrico (@dalecarrico) September 4, 2016
@dgolumbia @gl33p so what is interesting is the way tech discourse has displaced civics (pubic policing) onto instruments (private guns)...
— Dale Carrico (@dalecarrico) September 4, 2016
@dgolumbia @gl33p to yield the usual de-politicizing and hence reactionary rationalizations -- eg. gun politics as long prevalent tech talk.
— Dale Carrico (@dalecarrico) September 4, 2016
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