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For the longest time, I couldn't get worked up about privacy: my
right to it; how it's dying; how we're headed for an even more
wired, underregulated, overintrusive, privacy-deprived planet.
I mean, I probably have more reason to think about this stuff
than the average John Q. All Too Public. A few years ago, for
instance, after I applied for a credit card at a
consumer-electronics store, somebody got hold of my name and
vital numbers and used them to get a duplicate card. That
somebody ran up a $3,000 bill, but the nice lady from the fraud
division of the credit-card company took care of it with steely
digital dispatch. (I filed a short report over the phone. I
never lost a cent. The end.)
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"It's a very schizophrenic time," says Sherry Turkle, professor of sociology at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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I also hang out online a lot, and now and then on the Net
someone will impersonate me, spoofing my E-mail address or
posting stupid stuff to bulletin boards or behaving in a
frightfully un-Quittner-like manner in chat parlors from here to
Bianca's Smut Shack. It's annoying, I suppose. But in the end,
the faux Quittners get bored and disappear. My reputation, such
as it is, survives.
I should also point out that as news director for Pathfinder,
Time Inc.'s mega info mall, and a guy who makes his living on
the Web, I know better than most people that we're hurtling
toward an even more intrusive world. We're all being watched by
computers whenever we visit Websites; by the mere act of
"browsing" (it sounds so passive!) we're going public in a way
that was unimaginable a decade ago. I know this because I'm a
watcher too. When people come to my Website, without ever
knowing their names, I can peer over their shoulders, recording
what they look at, timing how long they stay on a particular
page, following them around Pathfinder's sprawling offerings.
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