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starfleet_bop | 4 years ago
People have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their own home. In addition, the right to privacy is not limited by arbitrary definitions of shamefulness.
> so... jehovah's witnesses?
That’s a whataboutism logical fallacy. Just because some people do it and get away with it doesn’t make it acceptable.
> How is this any different than going around and recording the coordinates of every street address? You can also make the argument that a street address can be correlated to an individual, and by associating a coordinate with it, you are violating "user’s right to privacy by publishing information about them without their consent"
That’s kind of a straw man IMO. An IP address is public information and is transmitted by every IP packet. You can’t compare it to someone’s home address which is normally private by default. By associating a location with an IP address, you are effectively transmitting your location with every IP packet.
BlueTemplar|4 years ago
ozim|4 years ago
So we have a GDPR breach now as I posted some IP address here :).
They are PI if you also have other data that can tie it to an individual without sending request to his internet provider. That company in the article is mostly tying IP to a country/region.
There is no technical way to get any info about individual from the IP address alone. I also disagree with "which in many cases can be directly tied to an individual" most often it is not tied and if it is then only temporarily and only if and when user logs into your system and you have other information about him that he gave out. With CG NAT and often dynamic IP allocation by providers.
In the end any "outrage" is not substantiated because the way IP addresses are managed you have whois registry that is public and that will tell you which provider has this IP and country/region as well. So they don't do anything that is not already possible.
01acheru|4 years ago
IPs may be treated as personal data, but it doesn’t apply to each and every case you handle or store an IP address.
gruez|4 years ago
gruez|4 years ago
AFAIK that "expectation of privacy" doesn't include things that you can see from the street.
>In addition, the right to privacy is not limited by arbitrary definitions of shamefulness.
What makes you think I suggested otherwise? I suggest you read more carefully next time. Obviously the "shameful" part was added to make an example. The "that's on you" won't make any sense if it was a innocuous activity, eg. watching TV.
>That’s a whataboutism logical fallacy. Just because some people do it and get away with it doesn’t make it acceptable.
it's not a whataboutism fallacy because the fact that it happens on a frequent basis and doesn't provoke action from law enforcement suggests that it is acceptable, at least from a legal point of view.
I suppose you could claim that people being annoyed at them makes it unacceptable from a social/moral point of view, but I'm still skeptical whether that has any implications from a privacy point of view. People are annoyed because it disturbs them, not because of the privacy implications. Furthermore, there are many ways of determining whether someone's home that doesn't involve knocking on doors, eg. checking whether the lights are on, or the cars on the driveway.
>That’s kind of a straw man IMO.
No, it's not. It's https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reductio_ad_absurdum. A strawman is when you replace your opponents argument with a false one. I fail to see how I did that. There's nothing in that paragraph that suggests that "going around and recording the coordinates of every street address" is something that you proposed. You really need to lay off responding to everything with "fallacy", even when it isn't.
>An IP address is public information and is transmitted by every IP packet.
This seems baffling to me. Your IP address should get additional privacy protections because it's public?
>You can’t compare it to someone’s home address which is normally private by default.
Given how much I buy stuff online, it's not "private" by any means.
>By associating a location with an IP address, you are effectively transmitting your location with every IP packet.
1. the location is very coarse. Realistically speaking it's accurate down to the city you're in.
2. you realize that's how phone numbers worked, at least one or two decades ago? it has almost the same properties. It's transmitted with every call (caller ID) and it's vaguely correlated with your neighborhood (the middle 3 digits are the central office code). should we ban databases of central office code locations as well?