Privacy Ethics
When (if ever) is it right to intrude on another's
privacy? Is privacy a "right"?
In my opinion, when we saw someone trying to harm another
people or themselves, we can intrude the privacy of them. Absolutely, privacy
is a right. Usually, we can't intrude another's privacy, but we might have
possibility that situations could be harmful to innocent people by someone. In
this situation, intruding privacy is material to protect others.
In your post, please contextualize your ideas in relation to
Allen or Warren and Brandeis (the two articles you read in advance of
2/21).
In Allen's case, she spying her child, but there are
specific reason behind spying. it included ethical reasons to spy on child. So,
I think that intrude someone is should not occurred, but if there are no
options to choose such like someone trying to delivery weapons with a big bag
for killing people, we should do something even though it intrudes their
privacy. For this reason, only specific reason can be excuse for it.
Please discuss how you could apply your beliefs about
privacy to a decision you might make about whether or not to apply techniques
that you have learned in our course so far, such as Google dorking.
I would not want to
violate privacy of others with my judgement, but if someone was harming people,
I would get into the case to stop them without breaking laws. In Google
dorking, anybody can show information of websites, but they do not make or get
benefits from this information. Like so, I will not break law, but I’ll do what
I can do for preventing serious incident.
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