really?! Did you even read the thread?
Yes, I read those things, but I don't read them the same way you do. The responses to those quotes seemed to me like they were taking them out of context. Maybe I'm wrong to do so, but I didn't read any of them literally.
No policy secrets. No institutional secrets. No methodological secrets.
Those two exceptions might be acceptable. If it's a question of "we get everything we have now or no secrets at all", though, I'm gonna come down on the side of "no secrets at all".
...I find myself in agreement. Really, I don't think governments should be allowed to have secrets.
All they're saying is that there shouldn't be secret laws. It is wrong for a person to live as subject to a law without even knowing that the law exists, or what its boundaries and rammifications are. Supposedly, the NSA exists within a framework of law that justifies its existence and governs its operations, but we're not supposed to know about them? That's the stuff that shouldn't be secret. In (obvious to me) context, nowhere is anybody saying that DATA should be open, only the legal and procedural framework that data is gathered under, but that's what they were accused of saying. Taking it in the direction that everybody did was completely ignoring context and taking the statements to their most extreme literal interpretation possible.
1) Should the NSA (or a similar body) be legally allowed to conduct secret surveillance against individuals? If so what conditions are the minimum requirement for doing so?
Nope. NSA shouldn't exist for that matter.
I did read this post, but I didn't notice that it was made by GreatJustice. Removing the character from the statement, I read it as "Agencies like the NSA shouldn't exist" or "Mass dragnet collection and storage of data under the pretense of making it easier to obtain some interesting bits." And I don't think this is an extreme. The whole NSA methodology is to find the needle in a haystack by taking the whole haystack, filtering out the needle, and then holding on to the hay and the needle forever. I think that is extreme, and I don't think that it's an extreme stance to object to an extreme measure.
But it's GreatJustice, who I'm pretty sure is an anarcho-capitalist, so my reading of his words was probably wrong. So here's me admitting that the reaction was likely not hyperbole specifically as relates specifically to GreatJustice and only GreatJustice.
Yeah, it's totally the "pro-surveillance" side (nice framing there, by the way) making the crazy statements and being completely unreasonable, while the "anti-surveillance" side is totally reasonable and only wants to tweak the current system a little bit. That's EXACTLY how this thread is going
Actually, yeah, that's how I see it. Not going to assign names, but this is what I've seen in the last couple pages and pretty much every time the topic has come up on this forums (or most places)
I think there's a camp here that thinks any surveillance program should be transparent about its methods, scale and purpose, should be as limited in scale as possible, and held under very strict oversight and accountability. Hence describing that an organization like the NSA, defined by secret mass data-gathering, shouldn't exist. And if that isn't attainable then it would be better for there to be no surveillance programs at all. This is why I termed it anti-surveillance, with surveillance as defined by the nature and scale of operations by the NSA.
And there's a camp that doesn't think things are really so bad. I recognize that even this camp admits that it's a little out of control, and there needs to be some scaling back and oversight. But the difference is they believe a program like the NSA is necessary and justified, as defined by mass data-gathering and secrecy. This is why I termed it pro-surveillance. Further, they trust that the problems that exist with it right now will be addressed in a manner that they will eventually be satisfied with by existing government processes, and it's not something to really get so worked up about.