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Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab
David Banisar, 2002-01-28

Industry's push for new exemptions from the Freedom of Information Act is unnecessary and dangerous.

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Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-28
Anonymous (3 replies)
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-28
H. Carvey
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-29
Anonymous
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-29
Anonymous
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-28
Anonymous
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-29
Democrazy (1 replies)
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-02-02
Anonymous
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-29
Anonymous
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-30
Still Anonymous
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-01-31
Anonymous
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-02-01
Anonymous
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-02-05
Black Helicopter Pilot
Reject the Corporate Secrecy Grab 2002-02-07
Sara Thustra
Thanks for an excellent article. No matter what linguistic obfuscations the lawyers, politicians and various fatcats use to disguise what they're doing, the fact remains that he who is informed is in power. Anything that restricts the people's access to information that affects their lives and livelihoods is sick and wrong, and I'd like to see even more people saying so. Loudly. In a sense, I find it funny that the government and industries chose in this case to cloak the issue in "computer security". It may very well be the hacker community that ends up holding the key to rebalancing things in the public's favor...(Viva La Information, Sara T.)

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/56/10424#10424
Sarah T. nailed it. 2002-02-08
BHP







 

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