Glenn Greenwald was one of the first reporters to see ā and write about ā the Edward Snowden files, with their revelations about the United States’ extensive surveillance of private citizens. In this searing talk, Greenwald makes the case for why you need to care about privacy, even if youāre ānot doing anything you need to hide.”
There is an entire genre of YouTube videosĀ devoted to an experience whichĀ I am certain that everyone in this room has had.Ā It entails an individual who,Ā thinking they’re alone,Ā engages in some expressive behavior āĀ wild singing, gyrating dancing,Ā some mild sexual activity āĀ only to discover that, in fact, they are not alone,Ā that there is a person watching and lurking,Ā the discovery of which causes themĀ to immediately cease what they were doingĀ in horror.Ā The sense of shame and humiliationĀ in their face is palpable.Ā It’s the sense of,Ā “This is something I’m willing to doĀ only if no one else is watching.”
This is the crux of the workĀ on which I have been singularly focusedĀ for the last 16 months,Ā the question of why privacy matters,Ā a question that has arisenĀ in the context of a global debate,Ā enabled by the revelations of Edward SnowdenĀ that the United States and its partners,Ā unbeknownst to the entire world,has converted the Internet,Ā once heralded as an unprecedented toolĀ of liberation and democratization,into an unprecedented zoneĀ of mass, indiscriminate surveillance.
1:28There is a very common sentimentĀ that arises in this debate,Ā even among people who are uncomfortablewith mass surveillance, which saysĀ that there is no real harmĀ that comes from this large-scale invasionbecause only people who are engaged in bad actsĀ have a reason to want to hideĀ and to care about their privacy.Ā This worldview is implicitly groundedĀ in the proposition that there are two kinds of people in the world,Ā good people and bad people.Ā Bad people are those who plot terrorist attacksĀ or who engage in violent criminalityĀ and therefore have reasons to want to hide what they’re doing,Ā have reasons to care about their privacy.Ā But by contrast, good peopleĀ are people who go to work,Ā come home, raise their children, watch television.Ā They use the Internet not to plot bombing attacksĀ but to read the news or exchange recipesĀ or to plan their kids’ Little League games,Ā and those people are doing nothing wrongand therefore have nothing to hideĀ and no reason to fearĀ the government monitoring them.
2:29The people who are actually saying thatĀ are engaged in a very extreme actĀ of self-deprecation.Ā What they’re really saying is,Ā “I have agreed to make myselfĀ such a harmless and unthreateningĀ and uninteresting person that I actually don’t fearĀ having the government know what it is that I’m doing.”Ā This mindset has found what I thinkĀ is its purest expressionĀ in a 2009 interview withĀ the longtime CEO of Google, Eric Schmidt, who,Ā when asked about all the different ways his companyĀ is causing invasions of privacyĀ for hundreds of millions of people around the world,Ā said this: He said,Ā “If you’re doing something that you don’t wantĀ other people to know,Ā maybe you shouldn’t be doing it in the first place.”
3:14Now, there’s all kinds of things to say aboutĀ that mentality,Ā the first of which is that the people who say that,Ā who say that privacy isn’t really important,Ā they don’t actually believe it,Ā and the way you know that they don’t actually believe itĀ is that while they say with their words that privacy doesn’t matter,Ā with their actions, they take all kinds of stepsĀ to safeguard their privacy.Ā They put passwords on their emailĀ and their social media accounts,Ā they put locks on their bedroomĀ and bathroom doors,Ā all steps designed to prevent other peopleĀ from entering what they consider their private realmĀ and knowing what it is that they don’t want other people to know.Ā The very same Eric Schmidt, the CEO of Google,Ā ordered his employees at GoogleĀ to cease speaking with the onlineĀ Internet magazine CNETĀ after CNET published an articleĀ full of personal, private informationĀ about Eric Schmidt,Ā which it obtained exclusively through Google searchesĀ and using other Google products. (Laughter)Ā This same division can be seenĀ with the CEO of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg,Ā who in an infamous interview in 2010Ā pronounced that privacy is no longerĀ a “social norm.”Ā Last year, Mark Zuckerberg and his new wifeĀ purchased not only their own housebut also all four adjacent houses in Palo AltoĀ for a total of 30 million dollarsĀ in order to ensure that they enjoyed a zone of privacyĀ that prevented other people from monitoringĀ what they do in their personal lives.
4:50Over the last 16 months, as I’ve debated this issue around the world,Ā every single time somebody has said to me,Ā “I don’t really worry about invasions of privacyĀ because I don’t have anything to hide.”Ā I always say the same thing to them.Ā I get out a pen, I write down my email address.Ā I say, “Here’s my email address.Ā What I want you to do when you get homeĀ is email me the passwordsĀ to all of your email accounts,Ā not just the nice, respectable work one in your name,Ā but all of them,Ā because I want to be able to just troll throughĀ what it is you’re doing online,Ā read what I want to read and publish whatever I find interesting.Ā After all, if you’re not a bad person,Ā if you’re doing nothing wrong,Ā you should have nothing to hide.”
5:26Not a single person has taken me up on that offer.Ā I check and ā (Applause)Ā I check that email account religiously all the time.Ā It’s a very desolate place.Ā And there’s a reason for that,Ā which is that we as human beings,Ā even those of us who in wordsĀ disclaim the importance of our own privacy,Ā instinctively understandĀ the profound importance of it.Ā It is true that as human beings, we’re social animals,Ā which means we have a need for other peopleĀ to know what we’re doing and saying and thinking,Ā which is why we voluntarily publish information about ourselves online.Ā But equally essential to what it meansĀ to be a free and fulfilled human beingĀ is to have a place that we can goĀ and be free of the judgmental eyes of other people.Ā There’s a reason why we seek that out,Ā and our reason is that all of us āĀ not just terrorists and criminals, all of us āĀ have things to hide.Ā There are all sorts of things that we do and thinkĀ that we’re willing to tell our physicianĀ or our lawyer or our psychologist or our spouseĀ or our best friend that we would be mortifiedĀ for the rest of the world to learn.Ā We make judgments every single dayĀ about the kinds of things that we say and think and doĀ that we’re willing to have other people know,Ā and the kinds of things that we say and think and doĀ that we don’t want anyone else to know about.Ā People can very easily in words claimĀ that they don’t value their privacy,Ā but their actions negate the authenticity of that belief.
7:01Now, there’s a reason why privacy is so cravedĀ universally and instinctively.Ā It isn’t just a reflexive movementĀ like breathing air or drinking water.Ā The reason is that when we’re in a stateĀ where we can be monitored, where we can be watched,Ā our behavior changes dramatically.Ā The range of behavioral options that we considerĀ when we think we’re being watchedĀ severely reduce.Ā This is just a fact of human natureĀ that has been recognized in social scienceĀ and in literature and in religionĀ and in virtually every field of discipline.Ā There are dozens of psychological studiesĀ that prove that when somebody knowsĀ that they might be watched,Ā the behavior they engage inĀ is vastly more conformist and compliant.Human shame is a very powerful motivator,Ā as is the desire to avoid it,Ā and that’s the reason why people,when they’re in a state of being watched, make decisionsĀ not that are the byproduct of their own agencybut that are about the expectationsĀ that others have of themĀ or the mandates of societal orthodoxy.
8:08This realization was exploited most powerfullyĀ for pragmatic ends by the 18th- century philosopher Jeremy Bentham,Ā who set out to resolve an important problemĀ ushered in by the industrial age,Ā where, for the first time, institutions had becomeĀ so large and centralizedĀ that they were no longer able to monitorĀ and therefore control each one of their individual members,Ā and the solution that he devisedĀ was an architectural designĀ originally intended to be implemented in prisonsĀ that he called the panopticon,the primary attribute of which was the constructionĀ of an enormous tower in the center of the institutionwhere whoever controlled the institutionĀ could at any moment watch any of the inmates,Ā although they couldn’t watch all of them at all times.Ā And crucial to this designĀ was that the inmates could not actuallysee into the panopticon, into the tower,Ā and so they never knewĀ if they were being watched or even when.Ā And what made him so excited about this discoveryĀ was that that would mean that the prisonerswould have to assume that they were being watchedĀ at any given moment,Ā which would be the ultimate enforcerĀ for obedience and compliance.Ā The 20th-century French philosopher Michel FoucaultĀ realized that that model could be usedĀ not just for prisons but for every institutionĀ that seeks to control human behavior:Ā schools, hospitals, factories, workplaces.Ā And what he said was that this mindset,Ā this framework discovered by Bentham,Ā was the key means of societal controlĀ for modern, Western societies,which no longer needĀ the overt weapons of tyranny āĀ punishing or imprisoning or killing dissidents,Ā or legally compelling loyalty to a particular party āĀ because mass surveillance createsĀ a prison in the mindthat is a much more subtleĀ though much more effective meansĀ of fostering compliance with social normsor with social orthodoxy,Ā much more effectiveĀ than brute force could ever be.
10:07The most iconic work of literature about surveillanceĀ and privacy is the George Orwell novel “1984,”which we all learn in school, and therefore it’s almost become a cliche.Ā In fact, whenever you bring it up in a debate about surveillance,Ā people instantaneously dismiss itĀ as inapplicable, and what they say is,“Oh, well in ‘1984,’ there were monitors in people’s homes,Ā they were being watched at every given moment,Ā and that has nothing to do with the surveillance state that we face.”Ā That is an actual fundamental misapprehensionĀ of the warnings that Orwell issued in “1984.”Ā The warning that he was issuingĀ was about a surveillance stateĀ not that monitored everybody at all times,Ā but where people were aware that they couldĀ be monitored at any given moment.Ā Here is how Orwell’s narrator, Winston Smith,described the surveillance systemĀ that they faced:Ā “There was, of course, no way of knowingĀ whether you were being watched at any given moment.”Ā He went on to say,Ā “At any rate, they could plug in your wireĀ whenever they wanted to.Ā You had to live, did live,Ā from habit that became instinct,Ā in the assumption that every sound you madeĀ was overheard and except in darknessĀ every movement scrutinized.”
11:16The Abrahamic religions similarly positĀ that there’s an invisible, all-knowing authorityĀ who, because of its omniscience,Ā always watches whatever you’re doing,Ā which means you never have a private moment,Ā the ultimate enforcerĀ for obedience to its dictates.
11:33What all of these seemingly disparate worksĀ recognize, the conclusion that they all reach,Ā is that a society in which peopleĀ can be monitored at all timesĀ is a society that breeds conformityĀ and obedience and submission,Ā which is why every tyrant,Ā the most overt to the most subtle,Ā craves that system.Conversely, even more importantly,Ā it is a realm of privacy,Ā the ability to go somewhere where we can thinkĀ and reason and interact and speakĀ without the judgmental eyes of others being cast upon us,Ā in which creativity and explorationĀ and dissent exclusively reside,Ā and that is the reason why,Ā when we allow a society to existĀ in which we’re subject to constant monitoring,Ā we allow the essence of human freedomĀ to be severely crippled.
12:29The last point I want to observe about this mindset,Ā the idea that only people who are doing something wrongĀ have things to hide and therefore reasons to care about privacy,Ā is that it entrenches two very destructive messages,Ā two destructive lessons,Ā the first of which is thatĀ the only people who care about privacy,Ā the only people who will seek out privacy,Ā are by definition bad people.Ā This is a conclusion that we should haveĀ all kinds of reasons for avoiding,Ā the most important of which is that when you say,“somebody who is doing bad things,”Ā you probably mean things like plotting a terrorist attackĀ or engaging in violent criminality,Ā a much narrower conceptionĀ of what people who wield power meanĀ when they say, “doing bad things.”Ā For them, “doing bad things” typically meansĀ doing something that poses meaningful challengesĀ to the exercise of our own power.
13:24The other really destructiveĀ and, I think, even more insidious lessonĀ that comes from accepting this mindsetĀ is there’s an implicit bargainĀ that people who accept this mindset have accepted,Ā and that bargain is this:Ā If you’re willing to render yourselfĀ sufficiently harmless,Ā sufficiently unthreateningĀ to those who wield political power,Ā then and only then can you be freeĀ of the dangers of surveillance.Ā It’s only those who are dissidents,Ā who challenge power,Ā who have something to worry about.Ā There are all kinds of reasons why we should want to avoid that lesson as well.Ā You may be a person who, right now,doesn’t want to engage in that behavior,Ā but at some point in the future you might.Ā Even if you’re somebody who decidesĀ that you never want to,Ā the fact that there are other peopleĀ who are willing to and able to resistĀ and be adversarial to those in power āĀ dissidents and journalistsĀ and activists and a whole range of others āĀ is something that brings us all collective goodĀ that we should want to preserve.Equally critical is that the measureĀ of how free a society isĀ is not how it treats its good,Ā obedient, compliant citizens,Ā but how it treats its dissidentsĀ and those who resist orthodoxy.Ā But the most important reasonĀ is that a system of mass surveillanceĀ suppresses our own freedom in all sorts of ways.It renders off-limitsĀ all kinds of behavioral choicesĀ without our even knowing that it’s happened.Ā The renowned socialist activist Rosa LuxemburgĀ once said, “He who does not moveĀ does not notice his chains.”Ā We can try and render the chainsĀ of mass surveillance invisible or undetectable,Ā but the constraints that it imposes on usĀ do not become any less potent.
15:12Thank you very much.
15:14(Applause)
15:15Thank you.
15:16(Applause)
15:21Thank you.
15:24(Applause)
15:30Bruno Giussani: Glenn, thank you.Ā The case is rather convincing, I have to say,Ā but I want to bring you backĀ to the last 16 months and to Edward SnowdenĀ for a few questions, if you don’t mind.Ā The first one is personal to you.Ā We have all read about the arrest of your partner,Ā David Miranda in London, and other difficulties,Ā but I assume thatĀ in terms of personal engagement and risk,Ā that the pressure on you is not that easyĀ to take on the biggest sovereign organizations in the world.Ā Tell us a little bit about that.
16:03Glenn Greenwald: You know, I think one of the things that happensĀ is that people’s courage in this regardgets contagious,Ā and so although I and the other journalists with whom I was workingĀ were certainly aware of the risk āĀ the United States continues to be the most powerful country in the worldĀ and doesn’t appreciate it when youĀ disclose thousands of their secretsĀ on the Internet at will āĀ seeing somebody who is a 29-year-oldĀ ordinary person who grew up inĀ a very ordinary environmentĀ exercise the degree of principled courage that Edward Snowden risked,Ā knowing that he was going to go to prison for the rest of his lifeĀ or that his life would unravel,Ā inspired me and inspired other journalistsĀ and inspired, I think, people around the world,Ā including future whistleblowers,Ā to realize that they can engage in that kind of behavior as well.
16:47BG: I’m curious about your relationship with Ed Snowden,Ā because you have spoken with him a lot,Ā and you certainly continue doing so,Ā but in your book, you never call him Edward,Ā nor Ed, you say “Snowden.” How come?
17:00GG: You know, I’m sure that’s somethingĀ for a team of psychologists to examine. (Laughter)Ā I don’t really know. The reason I think that,Ā one of the important objectives that he actually had,Ā one of his, I think, most important tactics,Ā was that he knew that one of the waysĀ to distract attention from the substance of the revelationsĀ would be to try and personalize the focus on him,Ā and for that reason, he stayed out of the media.Ā He tried not to ever have his personal lifeĀ subject to examination,Ā and so I think calling him SnowdenĀ is a way of just identifying him as this important historical actorĀ rather than trying to personalize him in a wayĀ that might distract attention from the substance.
17:40Moderator: So his revelations, your analysis,Ā the work of other journalists,Ā have really developed the debate,Ā and many governments, for example, have reacted,Ā including in Brazil, with projects and programsĀ to reshape a little bit the design of the Internet, etc.Ā There are a lot of things going on in that sense.Ā But I’m wondering, for you personally,Ā what is the endgame?Ā At what point will you think,Ā well, actually, we’ve succeeded in moving the dial?
18:05GG: Well, I mean, the endgame for me as a journalistĀ is very simple, which is to make sureĀ that every single document that’s newsworthyĀ and that ought to be disclosedĀ ends up being disclosed,Ā and that secrets that should never have been kept in the first placeĀ end up uncovered.Ā To me, that’s the essence of journalismĀ and that’s what I’m committed to doing.Ā As somebody who finds mass surveillance odiousfor all the reasons I just talked about and a lot more,Ā I mean, I look at this as work that will never endĀ until governments around the worldĀ are no longer able to subject entire populationsĀ to monitoring and surveillanceĀ unless they convince some court or some entityĀ that the person they’ve targetedĀ has actually done something wrong.Ā To me, that’s the way that privacy can be rejuvenated.
18:45BG: So Snowden is very, as we’ve seen at TED,Ā is very articulate in presenting and portraying himselfĀ as a defender of democratic valuesĀ and democratic principles.Ā But then, many people really find it difficult to believeĀ that those are his only motivations.Ā They find it difficult to believeĀ that there was no money involved,Ā that he didn’t sell some of those secrets,Ā even to China and to Russia,Ā which are clearly not the best friendsĀ of the United States right now.Ā And I’m sure many people in the roomĀ are wondering the same question.Ā Do you consider it possible there isĀ that part of Snowden we’ve not seen yet?
19:20GG: No, I consider that absurd and idiotic.Ā (Laughter) If you wanted to,Ā and I know you’re just playing devil’s advocate,Ā but if you wanted to sellĀ secrets to another country,Ā which he could have done and becomeĀ extremely rich doing so,Ā the last thing you would do is take those secretsĀ and give them to journalists and ask journalists to publish them,Ā because it makes those secrets worthless.Ā People who want to enrich themselvesĀ do it secretly by selling secrets to the government,Ā but I think there’s one important point worth making,Ā which is, that accusation comes fromĀ people in the U.S. government,Ā from people in the media who are loyalistsĀ to these various governments,Ā and I think a lot of times when people make accusations like that about other people āĀ “Oh, he can’t really be doing thisĀ for principled reasons,Ā he must have some corrupt, nefarious reason” āĀ they’re saying a lot more about themselvesthan they are the target of their accusations,Ā because ā (Applause) āĀ those people, the ones who make that accusation,Ā they themselves never actĀ for any reason other than corrupt reasons,Ā so they assumethat everybody else is plagued by the same diseaseĀ of soullessness as they are,Ā and so that’s the assumption.Ā (Applause)
20:29BG: Glenn, thank you very much. GG: Thank you very much.
20:32BG: Glenn Greenwald.Ā (Applause)
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