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1 # SOME DESCRIPTIVE TITLE
2 # Copyright (C) YEAR Richard Stallman
3 # This file is distributed under the same license as the A radical proposal to keep your personal data safe package.
4 # FIRST AUTHOR <EMAIL@ADDRESS>, YEAR.
5 #
6 #, fuzzy
7 msgid ""
8 msgstr ""
9 "Project-Id-Version: A radical proposal to keep your personal data safe n/a\n"
10 "POT-Creation-Date: 2020-10-28 06:25+0100\n"
11 "PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n"
12 "Last-Translator: FULL NAME <EMAIL@ADDRESS>\n"
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19 #. type: Title #
20 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:1
21 #, no-wrap
22 msgid "A radical proposal to keep your personal data safe"
23 msgstr ""
24
25 #. type: Plain text
26 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:4
27 msgid "by Richard Stallman, 2018-04-03"
28 msgstr ""
29
30 #. type: Plain text
31 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:8
32 #, no-wrap
33 msgid ""
34 "**The surveillance imposed on us today is worse than in the Soviet\n"
35 "Union. We need laws to stop this data being collected in the first\n"
36 "place.**\n"
37 msgstr ""
38
39 #. type: Plain text
40 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:15
41 msgid ""
42 "Journalists have been asking me whether the revulsion against the abuse of "
43 "[Facebook](https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/mar/31/big-data-lie-exposed-simply-blaming-facebook-wont-fix-reclaim-private-information) "
44 "data could be a turning point for the campaign to recover privacy. That "
45 "could happen, if the public makes its campaign broader and deeper."
46 msgstr ""
47
48 #. type: Plain text
49 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:21
50 msgid ""
51 "Broader, meaning extending to all surveillance systems, not just "
52 "[Facebook](https://www.theguardian.com/technology/facebook). Deeper, meaning "
53 "to advance from regulating the use of data to regulating the accumulation of "
54 "data. Because surveillance is so pervasive, restoring privacy is necessarily "
55 "a big change, and requires powerful measures."
56 msgstr ""
57
58 #. type: Plain text
59 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:30
60 msgid ""
61 "The surveillance imposed on us today far exceeds that of the Soviet "
62 "Union. For freedom and democracy’s sake, we need to eliminate most of "
63 "it. There are so many ways to use data to hurt people that the only safe "
64 "database is the one that was never collected. Thus, instead of the EU’s "
65 "approach of mainly regulating how personal data may be used (in its [General "
66 "Data Protection Regulation](https://www.eugdpr.org/) or GDPR), I propose a "
67 "law to stop systems from collecting personal data."
68 msgstr ""
69
70 #. type: Plain text
71 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:36
72 msgid ""
73 "The robust way to do that, the way that can’t be set aside at the whim of a "
74 "government, is to require systems to be built so as not to collect data "
75 "about a person. The basic principle is that a system must be designed not to "
76 "collect certain data, if its basic function can be carried out without that "
77 "data."
78 msgstr ""
79
80 #. type: Plain text
81 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:40
82 msgid ""
83 "Data about who travels where is particularly sensitive, because it is an "
84 "ideal basis for repressing any chosen target. We can take the London trains "
85 "and buses as a case for study."
86 msgstr ""
87
88 #. type: Plain text
89 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:45
90 msgid ""
91 "The Transport for London digital payment card system centrally records the "
92 "trips any given Oyster or bank card has paid for. When a passenger feeds the "
93 "card digitally, the system associates the card with the passenger’s "
94 "identity. This adds up to complete surveillance."
95 msgstr ""
96
97 #. type: Plain text
98 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:52
99 msgid ""
100 "I expect the transport system can justify this practice under the GDPR’s "
101 "rules. My proposal, by contrast, would require the system to stop tracking "
102 "who goes where. The card’s basic function is to pay for transport. That can "
103 "be done without centralising that data, so the transport system would have "
104 "to stop doing so. When it accepts digital payments, it should do so through "
105 "an anonymous payment system."
106 msgstr ""
107
108 #. type: Plain text
109 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:56
110 msgid ""
111 "Frills on the system, such as the feature of letting a passenger review the "
112 "list of past journeys, are not part of the basic function, so they can’t "
113 "justify incorporating any additional surveillance."
114 msgstr ""
115
116 #. type: Plain text
117 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:60
118 msgid ""
119 "These additional services could be offered separately to users who request "
120 "them. Even better, users could use their own personal systems to privately "
121 "track their own journeys."
122 msgstr ""
123
124 #. type: Plain text
125 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:66
126 msgid ""
127 "Black cabs demonstrate that a system for hiring cars with drivers does not "
128 "need to identify passengers. Therefore such systems should not be allowed to "
129 "identify passengers; they should be required to accept privacy-respecting "
130 "cash from passengers without ever trying to identify them."
131 msgstr ""
132
133 #. type: Plain text
134 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:73
135 msgid ""
136 "However, convenient digital payment systems can also protect passengers’ "
137 "anonymity and privacy. We have already developed one: [GNU "
138 "Taler](https://taler.net/en/). It is designed to be anonymous for the payer, "
139 "but payees are always identified. We designed it that way so as not to "
140 "facilitate tax dodging. All digital payment systems should be required to "
141 "defend anonymity using this or a similar method."
142 msgstr ""
143
144 #. type: Plain text
145 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:83
146 msgid ""
147 "What about security? Such systems in areas where the public are admitted "
148 "must be designed so they cannot track people. Video cameras should make a "
149 "local recording that can be checked for the next few weeks if a crime "
150 "occurs, but should not allow remote viewing without physical collection of "
151 "the recording. Biometric systems should be designed so they only recognise "
152 "people on a court-ordered list of suspects, to respect the privacy of the "
153 "rest of us. An unjust state is more dangerous than terrorism, and too much "
154 "security encourages an unjust state."
155 msgstr ""
156
157 #. type: Plain text
158 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:89
159 msgid ""
160 "The EU’s GDPR regulations are well-meaning, but do not go very far. It will "
161 "not deliver much privacy, because its rules are too lax. They permit "
162 "collecting any data if it is somehow useful to the system, and it is easy to "
163 "come up with a way to make any particular data useful for something."
164 msgstr ""
165
166 #. type: Plain text
167 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:100
168 msgid ""
169 "The GDPR makes much of requiring users (in some cases) to give consent for "
170 "the collection of their data, but that doesn’t do much good. System "
171 "designers have become expert at manufacturing consent (to repurpose Noam "
172 "Chomsky’s phrase). Most users consent to a site’s terms without reading "
173 "them; a company that "
174 "[required](https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/sep/29/londoners-wi-fi-security-herod-clause) "
175 "users to trade their first-born child got consent from plenty of users. Then "
176 "again, when a system is crucial for modern life, like buses and trains, "
177 "users ignore the terms because refusal of consent is too painful to "
178 "consider."
179 msgstr ""
180
181 #. type: Plain text
182 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:103
183 msgid ""
184 "To restore privacy, we must stop surveillance before it even asks for "
185 "consent."
186 msgstr ""
187
188 #. type: Plain text
189 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:112
190 msgid ""
191 "Finally, don’t forget the software in your own computer. If it is the "
192 "non-free software of Apple, Google or Microsoft, it [spies on you "
193 "regularly](https://gnu.org/malware/). That’s because it is controlled by a "
194 "company that won’t hesitate to spy on you. Companies tend to lose their "
195 "scruples when that is profitable. By contrast, free (libre) software is "
196 "[controlled by its "
197 "users](https://gnu.org/philosophy/free-software-even-more-important.html). "
198 "That user community keeps the software honest."
199 msgstr ""
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202 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:115
203 msgid ""
204 "Richard Stallman is president of the Free Software Foundation, which "
205 "launched the development of a free/libre operating system GNU."
206 msgstr ""
207
208 #. type: Plain text
209 #: A_radical_proposal_to_keep_your_personal_data_safe.md:121
210 msgid ""
211 "Copyright 2018 Richard Stallman. Released under [Creative Commons "
212 "Attribution NoDerivatives License "
213 "4.0](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/). The original English "
214 "version was published in [The "
215 "Guardian](https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/apr/03/facebook-abusing-data-law-privacy-big-tech-surveillance) "
216 "2018-04-03."
217 msgstr ""