One thing I, personally, find very interesting is that a lot of wording from the coalition contract on this and related matters is apparently taken from or at least based on [0] a document [1] released by the CCC for that very purpose. I haven't personally carefully verified this to be true, but I have no reason to distrust the linked report.
The last sentences already address this: "Ich sollte an der Stelle vielleicht auch klar ansagen: Die Politiker, die anderer Lobbyisten vorformulierte Entwürfe übernehmen, sind faule Schufte. Die, die unsere vorformulierten Entwürfe durchwinken, sind wohlinformierte und hochintelligente Ehrenleute!1!!" ;)
"At this point I should perhaps also state clearly: The politicians who adopt other lobbyists' pre-formulated drafts are lazy villains. Those who wave through our pre-formulated drafts are well-informed and highly intelligent people of honor!1!!"
> There is [...] a prohibition of state authorities to keep vulnerabilities a secret.
This is another great thing. It is simply unethical to hoard vulnerabilities, as this will eventually backfire[0]
> On top that all future security legislation will be subject to an evaluation by a panel of independent experts who have to look into issues with any potential restrictions on freedom.
I'm genuinely a bit confused and suspicious. The german state is known for it's contradictions regarding security and privacy, e.g., mapping sites cannot record "street level" images in public view, but the government will decree what is and is not allowed speech and has been caught compromising systems to monitor that.
Now the government that is obsessed with making sure everyone thinks only approved things is going to codify a right to encryption and prohibit state authorities (Is there a 5+1 eyes workaround prohibition) from building in or maintaining vulnerabilities?
Maybe this really is just a bone for the peasants that will fool them into feeling like they have rights, while the Ol' 5+1 Eye Switcheroo is used to keep vulnerabilities and compromise encryption anyways.
>mapping sites cannot record "street level" images in public view, but the government will decree what is and is not allowed speech
This isn't a contradiction unless you view everything through an American cultural lens. There is no conception of absolute freedom of speech in Germany. The public sphere in Germany is not the Wild West, never has been, never will be and has always been subject to considerations about what is in the public interest. In public you're not just an individual, you're a "Staatsbürger", a citizen of the state, and you have not only privileges but obligations to maintain public life.
Right to your data, your own body, your private communication, your own image, and so forth is part of the private sphere and personal, and as such enjoys much more protection.
I think it's worth pointing out that that's a specifically legal distinction, and one frequently ignored by, well, some parts of the US populace, some of the time.
You can't deny the Holocaust or directly call for violence. That's about all I can think of. The interpretation of that isn't just done by the government, but by courts, which seem to do a pretty okay job at it. You can still express political opinions pretty unproblematically.
Really? Can you give an example, aside from Holocaust denial?
If anything, having lived in both the US and Germany, I feel more free in Germany. As an example, Google would not have been able to fire James Damore for his memo here.
The US libel laws are much more publisher-friendly - I cannot legally claim that Oury Jalloh [0] was murdered in Germany (even though he almost definitely was), whereas in the US the accused police has a higher burden in proving he wasn't.
But US-style FoS only applies to the government in the first place:
"Freedom of speech, also called free speech, means the free and public expression of opinions without censorship, interference and restraint by the government."
Specifically: "The First Amendment's constitutional right of free speech, which is applicable to state and local governments under the incorporation doctrine,[6] prevents only government restrictions on speech, not restrictions imposed by private individuals or businesses unless they are acting on behalf of the government.[7]"
So companies can restrict your speech all day long, as happened with James Damore.
"However, laws may restrict the ability of private businesses and individuals from restricting the speech of others, such as employment laws that restrict employers' ability to prevent employees from disclosing their salary to coworkers or attempting to organize a labor union.[8]"
But that is not the 1st amendment or general FoS legislation, but specifically employment laws. And employment laws are notoriously employer-friendly and employee-hostile in the US.
Exactly. They can't mandate a vaccine if you just sit at home your whole life. But if you enter the public sphere there are certain rules you need to follow, and the state can mandate those.
There already were mandatory vaccinations (against smallpox) in Germany, up to the 1970s, and there is a current vaccine mandate against measles for children. That cat has been out of the bag for a long time.
And with good reason. Smallpox, rabies, tetanus, and tuberculosis are practically extinct in Western Europe because of vaccines. Let's try to add Covid to that list, please?
Yeah, the Nazis did do a lot of medical experiments on "undesirable people", and so did the Japanese. While I'm strongly pro-vaccination and, working in a hospital, deeply annoyed (an understatement) by the unvaccinated people flooding the ICU, I still think a vaccine mandate is a pretty big consitutional issue. Force-medicating people is really the last resort of the impotent, and it sits really wrong with me. And considering the way things are going, it is completely possible that this could become a yearly thing, what happens if it is the foot in the door for more of these kinds of policies?
Impotent does not make sense here, the state is actually the entity that society grants the greatest power: monopoly of violence and decisions over medical autonomy and life and death.
I think it is an illusion to believe the COVID-vaccines are anything else then well researched. Firstly the entire brainpower of the most advanced medical systems in history had this as their number one priority at least since the pandemic — I am not a medical expert, but other medical experts would have brought forth reasonable doubts. So far all doubts by medical personal came by people who don't work in the field or phrased it as gut feeling, not as hard statistical facts or even annectdotal evidence.
Also: over 8.120.000.000 doses have been administered worldwide. If there would have been conaiderable side effects, even the rarest of the rarest ones would have shown up by now. The idea that there are delayed effects showing up after years is a myth that stems from a misunderstanding of the word "long term side effects". The long term here doesn't mean the effects show up after a long term. It means the effects show up nearly immidiately, but came to stay long term.
Any society has to weigh the right of its citizens. If a mass murderer kills a ton of people, he breaks others rights to a high enough level that the state can harm their rights by jailing them. If a person doesn't vaccinate (which in practise does no harm to them besides a little sting, as we know now) they also impact the rights of others: the rest of society has to stay home in lockdowns, businesses have to close, they potentially block the health system and endager themselves and other people, etc.
From a state perspective that has to balance these rights the decision is clear.
> had less registered side effects than only BioNTech in one year
Isn't this just some kind of bias? For example reporting and spreading information is easier than it was in 1970s, or that we take any suspected side effect for real these days?
They werent mRNA vaccines either right? We've got to realize that biotech research moves forward at a blazing speed too. It might not give you perfect protection, but It's quite unlikely to harm you.
I understand being anti government and fact rejecting is the new green, but I doubt it'll help you long-term.
It's about the number of patients, not the time. It's cheaper to run a trial over a longer period of time, a few patients at a time, but they don't continue to track patients for the entire duration. In this case tons of money was thrown at it and they were able to run tons of patients in parallel. Billions of doses of the vaccine have been given - seriously, what more do you want?
Because mRNA vaccines doesn't contain the dangerous virus at all, "just some genetic information" which will trigger your immune system to build antibodies. Things move forward, TTM for software features these days are often shorter because of technical advances, why wouldn't the same be true in biotech?
> Even worst dictators didn’t try yet to push a needle and inject some chemical substance into human body without consent.
Hitler literally used compulsory medical treatment (sometimes via injections) to sterilise people without consent (and sometimes without the victim knowing what had happened): http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2017/ph241/payzer2/.
And here we go, Germany doing Hitler again. Although obvious I didn’t want to mention him in order to avoid Godwin’s law. I was merely referring to todays leaders that are called dictators by NATO, like Putin, Lukashenko, Kim Jong, Xi Jinping and similar. None of them even thinks about mandatory vaccination, but democratic Germany already plans it.
Flamebait like that is egregiously against the site guidelines and will get you banned here. No more of this, please.
We'd appreciate it if you'd please stop posting flamewar comments and ideological battle comments to HN in general. It's not what this site is for, and it destroys what it is for. I'm not going to ban you, because you've also been posting some good comments, but please stick to those in the future.
I mean, we employ an entire police apparatus to prevent individuals from bringing harm to others by doing what they please. It’s just a matter of perspective.
You are not allowed to do certain stuff in a society, and the society has a variety of enforcement mechanisms to enforce compliance.
This is absolutely false. And that’s as it should be.
The police, and law enforcement more broadly, generally do not prevent crime, rather they investigate and charge after crime has occurred.
As a consequence of that, perhaps, some future crimes may be prevented.
Mandating medical intervention and limitations on those who refuse is idiotic because it’s ham fisted and will obviously radicalise at least some people, for very debatable gains.
I think that for example the law forbidding you from burning plastic trash in your furnace, or running a diesel car without a DPF, can be well classified as "to prevent individuals from bringing harm to others by doing what they please".
The gains in case of covid seem to be to prevent costly impact on healthcare system (non-covid care getting postponed, staff burning out and quitting).
None of these things are being done on the basis of harm. Someone who is vaccinated but has a coronavirus infection is doing more harm than someone who is uninfected and unvaccinated.
Policing people based on an abstract statistical potential to do harm is an unworkable approach to running a society. And has disturbing implications.
Yeah. And if you drive your car into someone and cause an accident that is worse than driving drunk and you should face worse penalties.
Both of those are bad. Negligent driving is also criminal; there is a legal expectation that you are in control of your vehicle. And that is what is being attacked by the law.
The vaccine mandates aren't based on how in control your immune system is over the coronavirus; I won't rehash the natural immunity arguments but as an example they apply here.
And none of this is going to save you from the coronavirus. The evidence is that it is here to stay and we're all going to get it eventually. The vaccines aren't good enough to wipe it out and there is already an impressive number of vaccine escapes being seen. It isn't like an accident where you could go your whole life without being in one.
The vaccine is supposed to lower hospitalization rates. Maybe even it only dampens the numbers. But still, you don't overrun your hospitals to the extent there are no beds for both covid and non-covid patients.
I commend you to support vaccines even when I know
They aren't 100% effective in reducing severe disease, and the effectiveness is going down.
They don't prevent you from becoming infected and they don't prevent you from infecting others. This is what masks and social distancing are for.
I understand your concern. But even if you are convinced a government is your enemy, the vaccine is not that enemy.
Keep in mind that some interest groups were already pushing agaisnt vaccines before coronavirus. There is gain to be had from social unrest.
Aren’t infected people required to quarantine for a period of time? “Preventing both relatively larger and smaller harms, because they are both too large to tolerate,” doesn’t seem contradictory to me. And “not being vaccinated” is a pretty concrete property.
I’m not convinced we, here in Australia anyway, have achieved a balance sufficient to satisfy my particular set of beliefs - as far as they go in this five minute period.
The tetanus vaccine takes up to 5 shots and then still usually doesn't provide lifetime sterilizing immunity. If Pfizer's COVID vaccine takes three doses before sticking, that'd still do better.
Also, none of those other diseases are current pandemics.
I guess what is commonly called sterilizing immunity. Immunity which is so effective that the illness doesn't occur and which makes it impossible to infect others.
In this context I was recently pointed to the story of Marek's disease [0], which went from a "quite low death rate" to "100% lethal" in a few decades. I think it's worth to know about this and have a long, hard think about the potential consequences of universal, non-sterilising vaccination. We might be locking ourselves into a situation with no escape.
This has nothing to do with mRNA (to the best of my knowledge). mRNA is just a means to an end to get an immunogen into your body. Issues of effectiveness are (as far as I know) entirely due to the immunogen and not the delivery method (ie mRNA).
Vaccines vary in effectiveness. Both the extent of immunity they confer and how long those effects last. A vaccine that's less effective than we might like is still a vaccine. I don't think arguments over what should officially constitute "immunity" are very interesting or insightful - it's a meaningless line in the sand. Ask instead about (relative to the unvaccinated) incidence of death, incidence of permanent effects, severity of symptoms, rate of hospitalization, rate of spread to others, and similar.
Well put! The singular focus on death rate in this kind of discussions feels narrowminded, bordering on ignorance, as the severity of symptoms and brutal long term effects for many are just as awful
No, it's to a large extent about the rights of people who cannot be effectively vaccinated due to pre-existing medical conditions, and therefore have to rely on herd immunity, and the rights of people who cannot receive needed health care because hospitals are filled with unvaccinated Covid-19 patients.
Google street view is not illegal. People just have the right to request that Google blurs their house. And because so many people requested it in Germany, Google said it's too much effort and disabled it completely. They still drive through Germany and collect images to improve their navigation services.
Also, I don't understand the discussion: Why is limiting free speech contradicting privacy efforts?
Allowing people to prevent that their house being displayed on the internet is completely independent of stopping people writing racist slurs on the internet.
In Germany it's not about some extremist scalar ideology of freedom or control. You have basic rights and in daily life the rights of people collide.
In the case of Google Street view, there is the right of Google to choose their work (Art. 12 GG) vs. the right for privacy (derived from Art. 2 Abs. 1 GG) of people. Courts then have to follow a defined procedure to weigh those rights against each other. Apparently, it was ruled that the additional effort of blurring does not hinder Google's right to follow its occupation.
In the case of NetzDG (the law which enforces big social platform to delete criminal posts, such as racial slurs, which you probably refer to), you have the right of free speech of the poster (Art. 5 GG) and the right of human dignity of the guy who receives human dignity. Additionally, Art. 5 GG defines boundaries for free speech:
"These rights shall find their limits in the provisions of general laws, in provisions for the protection of young persons and in the right to personal honour. (Art. 5 Abs. 2 GG)."
I learned how the constitution works in detail in uni, and I think it's beautiful. To me, this is a recipe to have a healthy democratic society. And a democratic society has to be able to defend itself against anti-democratic, racists. Otherwise, it'll just collapse sooner or later.
> Apparently, it was ruled that the additional effort of blurring does not hinder Google's right to follow its occupation.
As I recall there was no legal obligation from Google to blur houses. They did so to calm this hot-button political topic.
At least back then there was the Panoramafreiheit which basically allowed you to take pictures in any public area without aids(e.g. a ladder or stick). For this reason they had to lower the height of the cameras for Germany to fall under this clause I think. I also think the legal situation changes quite a bit since this was last broadly discussed.
Google knew that what they might be able to claim had a very shaky legal foundation, not even taking the public backlash into account. But there is a big difference between taking a picture and taking billions of pictures, analyzing them, and putting them into a publicly accessible database. German courts are not at all dogmatic in the way they interpret the law, because a law written long back might need to be reinterpreted today in the light of new technologies or societal developments.
Yes, the CDU did CDU things. The SPD also did CDU things.
I didn't expect the CDU to do anything, but stagnant and corrupt policies. The SPD, however, was merely enabling the CDU for the sake of government "participation". No one but the SPD is at fault for not pushing for their own promises.
> Otherwise we pride ourselves with pretty incompetent intelligence agencies, so please keep your NWO conspiracy narratives to yourself.
I think that is why the person you replied to mentioned that they work together with other intelligence, which is not so much a conspiracy narrative if you've followed this stuff post Snowden.
Mapping sites can and do record street level images in Germany. They are required to blur certain personally-identifiable details recorded in those images.
No, the public space privacy doctrine thing with one of those amendments simply doesn't apply here. That doesn't make it theatre, just not the same as what you might be used to yourself. Common law doesn't apply here.
Yeah, that's pretty much a "Karteileiche" though, nobody takes that law seriously. This has less to do with germany being overly restrictive in that domain and more with incompetence: The law says something like "possessing hardware/software suitable for hacking is illegal" those who have written this law probably barely knew what software even is. They wanted to make sure they can get those evil "hackers" convicted but misunderstood the nature of what they are dealing with.
The law not being enforced makes this worse, not better as that means there is no motivation to remove it and it remains available to use to coerce/punish in the future.
Which part of that long list of things specifically rules out possession of nmap, a tool used by sysadmins all over the world to help ensure that their own systems are more secure, by ensuring that only specific ports are open for communication?
Mapping a network is not an activity exclusive to criminals.
Though, this particular interpretation does make Google Chrome illegal; it has dev tools that can be used for manually sending HTTPS POST requests with forged headers. (It also has XMLHttpRequest, which can be instructed to do what nmap does with relative ease.)
That shouldn't have happened. The law is super problematic and they can, for example (try to) hit you for finding (or even stumbling over) and responsibly disclosing security vulns, if you were not hired to do so.
But the part about hacker-tools applys only for tools that cannot be used legally (basically none) or are explicitly and knowingly made or acquired to be used illegally (as in you explicitly stated you are downloading this tool in order to get into a computer you do not have permission to get into). They have to prove you are not intending to use it legally (like checking your own network or one you were hired to check).
My impression is that most restrictions to the freedom of speech in Germany are rather in civil law than in criminal law. It is very easy to get (successfully) sued for saying things that is.
It is nearly impossible to speak about sexual harassment - because the perpetrator can sue you for intruding his private life.
More generally it is basically impossible to say anything negative about someone if you can't prove it true - it is considered slander. By contrast in the U.S. as far as I know it's up to whoever accuses you of slander to prove that what you say is untrue.
That creates a whole large area where you can speak freely about someone while not being able to accuse them legally before the court - in Germany that would either fall into "slander" bucket (if what you say has public significance but you can't prove it) or "private life" bucket (if what you say has allegedly no public significance even if you can prove it true).
Most Americans would be surprised that the German interpretation of “the untouchable dignity of man” prohibits even insults (“Beleidigung”). There was a case in 2018 of an American who got in a tussle with German airport police, called them Nazis, and was subsequently charged with defamation.[1] Clearly she wasn’t literally describing them as students of the philosophy of Adolf Hitler, but rather calling them authoritarians in a demeaning and insulting way. In the U.S. one might expect her to be charged perhaps with disorderly conduct or something similar, but punishing her for her words would require that there be some actual injury done to the officers’ reputation. Obviously ridiculous statements that no reasonable person would believe don’t fall under defamation in the U.S. A famous example was in the 1980s when Jerry Falwell unsuccessfully sued Hustler for publishing a fake interview with him claiming he drunkenly lost his virginity to his mother in an outhouse.
Certain depictions of violence are also considered to inherently violate human dignity as a whole (“Gewaltdarstellung”). That seems to be why there’s traditionally been so much video game censorship in Germany, like green blood or replacing all characters with robots[2].
Most Germans, on the other hand, would be surprised that insults are legal in many countries. Wikipedia has a map of this.[1]
There is another aspect regarding the legal situation in German that might be relevant to understand the difference to the US: The US constitution speeks only of the "freedom of speech", while the German consitution (Grundgesetz) goes much more into the detail:
(1) Every person shall have the right freely to express and disseminate his opinions in speech, writing and pictures and to inform himself without hindrance from generally accessible sources. Freedom of the press and freedom of reporting by means of broadcasts and films shall be guaranteed. There shall be no censorship.
(2) These rights shall find their limits in the provisions of general laws, in provisions for the protection of young persons and in the right to personal honour.
(3) Arts and sciences, research and teaching shall be free. The freedom of teaching shall not release any person from allegiance to the constitution.[2]
So the right to personal honour is directly acknowledged.
As an aside: "teaching" ("Lehre") refers to higher education only, but includes both, teaching in the narrower sense and learning. As a consequence a student at a German university has the right to learn as he or she seems fit and can only be forced to attend a course, if his or her physical presence is really necessary as there is no other way to learn a particular skill. So the presence at laboratory courses or courses focused on discussions can be made mandatory, but not at lectures. (The student must only attent the course exam, if there is one.) Isn't it interesting that a student in Germany has a constitutional right to be an autodidact?
Given how freely some people use “nazi” as an insult, I am not surprised that visitors to Germany may be unaware quite how strong an insult it is here.
I’m still a mere Ausländer here myself, so I only have a rough sense of it, but can say that every few hundred meters along the streets you can find a gold-coloured paving stone memorialising separate victims, either an individual or a family.
I've also heard from Germans that they have been called Nazis in the U.S. just for being German. So the police officers could also perceive it as an ethnic slur.
Read some history of how that came to be. You might still disagree when you're done, but I suspect you'll at least be able to answer your own question.
I'm very used to engineers' quibbles, very focused views ending up being very narrow views, clever/stupid explanations of why various laws can't be enforced, and so on.
But this has the be the biggest instance of missing the point, intentionally or not, I've seen in quite some time.
> [...] and also there were events in history like china's cultural revolution, Stalin's great cleansing and the killing fields in Cambodia (to name a few) [...]
Under the assumption that is meant to be a sincere argument:
The difference between the holocaust and those crimes is that Germany's the country primarily responsible for the former, giving special meaning to the denial of that crime and the law banning its denial.
No legal system anywhere can be absolute about not determining what the "truth" is, even when it comes to speech. The most common example is yelling "fire!" in a crowded theatre and causing a panic. Or posting a bomb threat to social media. That kind of mischief is illegal in most places as there's actual harm. And the law will have to determine the truth that there was no fire or no bomb, and that your speech had no purpose except to cause harm.
Another example is speech used to commit fraud or extortion. Were your profitable lies to exploit the vulnerable based on a genuine belief, or did you have criminal intent? The law will have to decide, and the situation will not always be clear, and often it comes down to determining intent.
In the case of holocaust denial, in Germany the potential harm of allowing it is seen as more genocide, so they've calibrated their free speech laws in respect of that. But there's never an exact place to draw the line; every legal system is going to have to make such judgment calls.
I believe your reasoning is faulty. In the vast majority of cases the law lays out rules and a court will attempt to determine various facts (ie truths) and interpret the rules in some broader context.
Codifying truth into law is quite unusual and seems like a bad idea to me. But then prosecuting people for hurling insults also seems like a bad idea to me - I guess I'm just thoroughly American.
Are you aware of difference between iterated and non iterated games in game theory?
Good. Now play the free speech game in an iterated manner where there exist a chance that a Nazi party comes to power and that likelihood is being lowered by a making holocaust denial illegal. From history you should now that there is no free expression under Nazis and that it takes them losing a world war to oust them (unlike communist regimes which collapse easier).
Does the US model really have free speech if it allows a nazi party getting to power in the future?
That is the paradox of tolerance and is what people learned from the fate of Weimar and what people incorporated into democratic constitutions made after 45.
Iterated games and future Nazis you say... How can you tell that banning holocaust denial won't result in a reactionary movement in the future that will result in Nazis getting into power again, ąs people might start questioning the holocaust precisely because they're not allowed to question it?
Given that neo-Nazi marches have more attendants in Germany than they do in US, I would question the assertion that it actually does anything to prevent the Nazis from coming to power.
The "paradox of tolerance" is not a paradox at all when one contemplates the difference between speech and action. Tolerating intolerant speech, no matter how extreme, is not a problem. Tolerating intolerant actions is where tolerance breaks down.
Dude, you recently had a right wing mob storm your parliament in an attempt to overthrow a democratic election in favor of a leader with clear fascist tendencies. Come on.
From Wikipedia: "The United States does not have hate speech laws, since the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that laws criminalizing hate speech violate the guarantee to freedom of speech contained in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution." [1]
If the threat is credible and imminent, yes. That's because killing people is obviously illegal, and those you threaten can reasonably take you at your word when you make a credible threat against them and respond accordingly to protect themselves. The speech is merely evidence of intent, not the crime itself. (Morally speaking, of course. Consult a local lawyer for legal advice applicable to your jurisdiction, as the law is not always moral or just.)
The US does not have laws against 'hate speech', this is completely incorrect. Libel is a civil matter, and the US is commonly described as having the highest bar to proving libel in the developed world
Yeah, I was mistaken about hate speech laws, sorry about that. My point though was that all countries do restrict speech in _some_ manner (for perfectly valid reasons), and I don't understand this fascination with "free speech" as some sacred concept that must be either whole or completely useless.
I believe libel in the US involves demonstrating actual harm.
The only thing I'm aware of here that I would consider a true infringement of freedom of speech is our obscenity laws. SCOTUS has (sadly) upheld at least some of them.
There is no "free speech, but". It's a binary. You either have free speech, or you don't. Limited free speech is, by definition, not free. It's limited.
Germany also bans "extreme" political parties. And no, that doesn't just mean the Nazis - the Communist party was also banned under the same law, for example. In general, it seems to cover any party with a platform that is in conflict with liberal democracy (even if, say, it's a platform of radical direct democracy, although I don't think this was ever tested in practice)?
> Another article by Haverbeck-Wetzel in the Voice of Conscience (November/December 2005) posited a thesis that Adolf Hitler was "just not to be understood from the believed Holocaust or his alleged war obsession, but only by a divine mission in the world-historical context."
> In the Hamburg court, she insisted the status of Auschwitz as a place of death is "not historically proven" and is "only a belief".
Did you read the article? She's been a vocal Holocaust denier since the end of the war. She's not a random person doubting the Holocaust and stupidly saying it in public. She was the wife of one of the higher ups in the Nazi party.
What do you mean by this word? I’ve seen it used as a political meme, but the usage always makes it seem like the supposed victim has some kind of entitlement to be a widely admired public figure regardless of what they say or do, without regard to the fleeting nature of fame and the fickleness of public admiration.
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I think this is all fine and dandy until the new Innenminister is starting his or her work early next year.
They will project the concerns of the civil service and somehow carve out enough special regulations that will all but hollow out any such rights.
I really want to believe that the majority of the coalition parties believe that they are saying, but that's not how politics are made or put into practice.
E.g., after Zimmermann, there was great hope that Germany would be a lot less conservative in it's interior policy, but following interior ministries have not really become much less conservative.
It's neat how many genuinely good points regarding information security and privacy made it into the coalition agreement, but everyone knows that just because it says in the paper that a new gov't wants to do something does not mean they do it.
While that's true, the Green party and FDP seem to mean it, when they pushed for these rights and progressive legislation - and combined, they have the majority within the coalition. Here is to hope.
A majority within the coalition does not translate to a majority in the Bundestag, which is what's needed to put any of these many promises and plans into actual action.
Well, obviously. However, they can push for it within the coalition, which in total does have the majority. Obviously. My point is, both parties have a better track record for putting weight behind their "promises" than the SPD, which is a spineless vessel for anyone taking the leash.
What does 'right to encryption' actually mean in this new plan? Can anyone explain in English?
For example, Google Translate (always dubious) gives the following*: "The state must also offer the possibility of real encrypted communication". Which may mean either 'e2e communication' or 'e2e communication except government' or even merely 'the state must create an encrypted messaging solution and allow everyone to use it, but nothing else will change' (and no one will actually use it due to scale effects Whatsapp etc. have).
Ideally it would be a constitutional ammendent, stating that privacy is a right of every citizen, and a human right.
Legislation to the right to encryption would then just follow from it, but having it in the constitution would make it harder for future governments to pass certain kinds of legislation, or if they pass them, the supreme court would declare them inconstitutional.
That is a good example of a misdirection play, a polarizing discussion point that political opponents get hung up on, which you never ever intended to actually pass, and you'll happily drop it later, but it helped relieve political pressure from other potential hot topics. We see typical conservative tactics being employed against the conservative base :)
The problem is defining "privacy" though, isn't it? What, specifically, would the amendment require or prohibit under the banner of "privacy"? How could this definition, if enshrined into nearly immutable law, be modified to account for a changing technological environment? How do you prevent such an amendment from suffering from the fate of the US second amendment, which in many places is honored mostly in the breach?
This should be the goal. In the days of the internet, mass surveillance, nearly eradicated privacy we need a right to have and use strong encryption without any backdoors.
If I had to bet, I would put money on "you have a right to encrypt, but we can't stop the 5+1 eyes from breaking the encryption for us and giving us the information" … Encryptocon?
Other posts here mentioned it as exaggerated but it sounds pretty detailed there. It worries me a bit because it would instantly move the EU from one of the best on privacy protections to one of the worst in the western world.
To expand on everybody elses arguments re:"EU law supersedes local law.."
The German Constitution supersedes EU law, especially considering that some parts of it cannot be changed, but the German Constitutional Court has decided to always try to read the Constitution in a way that matches EU law. The only exception is if they believe the EU has gone 'ultra vires', i.e. significantly above their power.
A recent decision by the GCC about policy of the European Central Bank has invoked this exception and has been fairly controversial because of that[0]. This situation has been defused by now, the German government has promised to reign in the GCC.
[0] and also bc some economists disagree with the economic basis of that decision, but that's a topic for another time
These EU law worries seem to be blown put of proportion.
But EU law is (while not legally required) most of the time adopted by consensus. I.e. a No by any EU gov can block a bill more or less indefinitely - certainly no one will try to outvote Germany or France on an important bill.
What makes you think EU law supersedes the local law? I don't know about the Germany but one old guard of EU, France, has been in supreme court since 1996 and every time they say French law supersedes EU or any intestinal law as it should be.
Well the issue of Poland is just politics, the old guard doesn't and won't see the EU as superior. And there are numerous cases proving that. Germany had to backtrack during the covid relief fund but they pretty much run the EU so..
"We require all government agencies to report security vulnerabilities they are aware of to the Federal Office for Information Security (BSI) and to undergo regular external audits of their IT systems."
If some well known agencies done this, loss of billions of dollars could have been avoided.
"In the future, development contracts will be regularly commissioned as open source, and the software will be made public as a matter of principle. There will be a right to encryption, and the state must also offer the option of genuine encrypted communication."
Personally I have a hard time to trust anything after heart bleed. A very basic attack that caused havoc. It proved that the quality of open source is nowhere close to the promises of OSS. It also tells that the automatic tests are too simple, if there are any. Fact is that a student in any class about the network stack probably already been targeted about far more complex attacks than heart bleed.
Encryption is mandatory for most things in EU. But the quality is difficult to evaluate.
> Personally I have a hard time to trust anything after heart bleed. A very basic attack that caused havoc. It proved that the quality of open source is nowhere close to the promises of OSS.
Heartbleed made international headlines, and got fixed very quickly. The equivalent bugs in Mike's Proprietary Encryption Layer are just another Tuesday. Which is better: being able to discover a bug like Heartbleed, or not being able to discover a bug like Heartbleed?
This is great, of course, but ~50 years of hesitant, schizophrenic legislation regarding digital security leaves me hesitant that Germany will actually be a forerunner on this one.
It mostly started becoming relevant in the 90s, back then Germany didn't even have any legislation on that front at all, just a very general paragraph about "computer/information system sabotage" they had to throw at phreakers and other early hackers, for the lack of any other law.
By the late 90s they tried to fix that situation, but as usual, only for the worse; The so called "Hackerparagraphs" were enacted, which literally banned the ownership of "hacking tools", that by legal definition technically even included stuff like a mundane Linux nmap or security tools distributed by the BSI [0].
Not sure if this is indeed exaggerated or unfounded and I hope it is. I heard it was taken off the agenda but that was more of a "for now", with plans to revisit it next year.
My thinking. Not sure how they will translate “right to encryption” into law, but if they mean right to E2E encrypted correspondence, then german law will be on a collision course with EU laws in development. If that happens it will be interesting to compare the debate with what happened with Poland this year.
Then they are setting up a constitutional challenge with the ECJ, just like Poland. They were on the brink of it recently, when it got hushed it 'because Poland was doing it', but this kind of thing will highlight the fact that Germany doesn't accept ECJ Supremacy either. Interestingly enough, they may back off just enough so that the Germany-ECJ '40 year dispute' doesn't get inflamed, hoping that maybe after a few more decades it will just 'go away' with a German Judiciary, Parliament and Population that just accept the ECJ Supremacy, even though it doesn't actually say that in any treaty.
Could someone help me understand the following sentence from the article?
> Controversial hackbacks, i.e., the hacking back of attacks, are rejected as a "means of cyber defense in principle."
Does this mean "hackbacks" are seen as cyber defense and therefore rejected, or that they are refused the name of cyber defense? Or something else? Does this mean there's intention to forbid cyber defense, esp. by govt/army?!? I'm confused by what's attempted to be communicated here. (Also, who's the presumed actor of those "hackbacks" here, govt? private entities? anyone?)
How are you going to trace back the hacking to country of origin?
Scan on Russian and Chinese characters or IP addresses in the code, that such a naïve take so yeah wouldn't be surprised if European leaders would totally go for it. Allies and other actors would totally not fake that as a distraction.
> In the future, development contracts will be regularly commissioned as open source, and the software will be made public as a matter of principle. There will be a right to encryption, and the state must also offer the option of genuine encrypted communication
Would be neat if they also mandated that all such software must be in a memory-safe language unless there’s no available alternative or there’s a compelling performance reason or the software is well-established/reviewed by experts in the field and no reasonable alternative exists.
huh, it wasn't that long ago that they outlawed the kind of "hacking tools" that would be used to verify the integrity of cipher systems... is that still on the books? My German is rustier than my Fourth, so I'm drawing a blank on a position reversal...
I approve of constitutionally guaranteeing that people can keep their communications secure, but as an American, I think the rhetorical framework surrounding the movement could be improved. We need negative rights, not positive ones.
People don't have a right to encryption, or a right to a specific computing environment, or really, a right to anything at all. What people do have is a right to be free of government limitations on the freedom of individuals to run whatever software they want on devices they own.
When you make something a positive right, that means it's something the government has to give you, and a government that can give you rights can take them away.
The American perspective is that people have rights just by virtue of existing, and the state can only illegally and immorality interfere with rights that you always possess, unconditionally, no matter what.
IMHO, the right framing isn't that people have a right to encryption, but that the state has no business interfering with the math people do on their own computers.
> The American perspective is that people have rights just by virtue of existing, and the state can only illegally and immorality interfere with rights that you always possess, unconditionally, no matter what.
Universal human rights isn't just American, it's a bedrock of democracies worldwide and of international law.
Also, the US doesn't say states "only illegally and immorality interfere", but that their core purpose is to actively protect human rights:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed ...
I don't see a distinction? The right to do something is both positive and negative. You have the right to do the thing, and the right to not have the government stop you. Nobody's permission is needed; government or another person
The American perspective only assigns enumerated rights to enumerated people. People are assumed to not have rights when the constitution does not apply, or it does not specify the right. The government grants Americans those rights, the people don't have them by virtue of existing. Otherwise, the government could not spy on other countries, since those people would have 4th amendment rights. The same goes for the right to drive, which the government is perfectly allowed to infringe on since it is not specified in the document.
That is already the case, however certain players that have an incentive, have actively undermined not just negative rights in general, but they have also been undermining people's ability to understand the topic, let alone support it.
Most people don't really understand, especially today, is that the bill of rights does not establish rights at all, it is really a bill of laws that prohibit the government and all subordinate jurisdictions from impeding on right in the enumerated manner.
The reason the founders quickly realized they needed the Bill of Rights is because humans are scoundrels and if you don't set hard boundaries, especially the attorneys will start convoluting everything into knots; hence why they felt strong enough to put the scoundrels on a leash regarding certain rights, e.g., free speech, right to keep and bear arms, etc. As it turns out, even those laws making it illegal, prohibiting government from infringing on those specific things, was not enough to keep the scoundrels at bay. They have still twisted us up in knots to the point where people are and do gaslight others by saying things like that basic things like suppressing free speech only applies to the government. Don't worry folks, slavery is only prohibited when the government does it … you are free to enslave.
It's not a matter of positive / negative really, it's not like encryption will be mandatory. The right to not have their encryption backdoored sounds negative enough to me
>People don't have a right to encryption, or a right to a specific computing environment, or really, a right to anything at all
This is an incredibly American libertarianish view, and essentially completely unheard of in Europe. The Europeans frame things in terms of positive rights all the time.
Yes, although you can also see the libertarianist approach in also some strains of British thinking.
All I'm doing is claiming that the American approach leads, in the end, to greater and more permanent personal liberty. I don't have anything against Europeans or their approach --- I just disagree with them on how to form a basis for limitations on state power.
> All I'm doing is claiming that the American approach leads, in the end, to greater and more permanent personal liberty
Your life being controlled by huge corporations because the government doesn't stop them from controlling everything doesn't give a lot of people personal liberty.
Then again, those huge corporations in question exist because the state gives them the ability to incorporate in the first place, and then exerts its monopoly on the use of force to protect their capital as it gets accumulated and concentrated.
Well, in this case the difference is between two statements:
* The state grants citizens the right to encrypt data
* The state cannot infringe upon the right of people to encrypt data.
These two statements have important differences. Philosophically, the difference is that in the positive rights model, government is the source of rights, and if the government did not exist, you would not have this right. In the negative rights model, the source of rights is man's natural free will, and the government's declaration of rights is an enumeration of an existing right he already had (and yes, I'm conflating negative and natural rights, I apologize, but the point is still true).
It seems pretty obvious that encryption is more accurately a negative right -- if you were the last human on earth, alone in the desert, you would of course have the right to encrypt a message you carve into a stone (who could stop you?).
This is in contrast to a positive right like "the right to housing". The "right to housing" is an entitlement that the government promises they are going to provide to all citizens. All citizens, even those who cannot afford or build one on their own, are given a home if they want one.
It is further clear when you look at what would happen if these two examples were reversed. If government grants the right to encrypt data, then what would happen if there was no government? Do you suddenly stop being able to do encryption? This would make no sense.
Similarly, if you were too weak or lacked the materials to build a house yourself (as the last man alive wandering the desert), nobody would naturally grant it to you. A house does not simply materialize through free will alone.
This suggests to me without a doubt that the right to encryption should be considered a negative right (and you should certainly believe this too). The only debate is whether the distinction matters in a practical sense -- this is where the libertarians will probably argue that it does, and I would certainly agree with them, but that argument is a lot more complex and subjective. In this case it's a little easier since the specifics/vagueries of this specific law leaves quite a bit to be desired over the obvious negative rights version of it.
The main difference is that with positive rights the government will defend your rights from others, while negative rights you are on your own to defend your rights from others. For example, if Google infringes someone's rights to free speech the government can intervene if it was a positive declaration, but with a negative declaration the government doesn't care since it only says that the government can't infringe on that right.
The problem is that positive rights vary WILDLY in practicality. For example, China has the positive right to protest ("citizens of the People's Republic of China enjoy freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession, and of demonstration") -- this means that you are allowed to attend official, government approved protests, of course, and not generally allowed to have protests otherwise. You still have the right to protest -- just not the right to choose what and when and where to protest. See how it gets twisted easily?
"The government shall not pass any law that restricts the ability of the people to protest" is a much stronger and safer precedent.
To be honest though, the real cool part of negative rights is that you can ALSO have positive rights on top of them. They are not mutually exclusive! Take the following phrasing:
* The government may not pass any law that infringes on the right of the people to encrypt their data (this is now a constitutional amendment and nobody can change it without a huge supermajority)
* Also, private companies may not prevent users from uploading, downloading, sending, or using encrypted data, subject to the following restrictions... (this is now law but we will keep updating this)
You have a negative right that says "the government can't abridge this right". THEN you also have a positive right that protects consumers against the actions of private companies. This is the ideal formulation for rights, I think. Negative rights are a constitutional baseline that are hard to get rid of. Positive rights need to change rapidly to address the quickly evolving world. Thus positive rights are best handled by lawmaking, while negative rights are best given strong constitutional protections.
Let’s keep the level higher on HN. The ideas of freedom and universal rights isn’t unheard of in Europe - it originated here, and you’re certainly not speaking for all os us when you claim we accept the idea of “positive rights”.
Excellent. I hope they fix the deliberate botch they made of the use of ID cards as key carriers. As far as I know the hardware is fine but the Bundestag fucked up the infrastructure.
Germany should look to Estonia who, IMHO, gets it right.
What are the differences in infrastructure and what choices did Estonia make that are better?
Is it possible that a 83x larger population has different infrastructure needs and it’s not that Estonia did an outstanding job but that Estonia’s problem space is much simpler?
Well, this isn’t what I was talking about but to your size point: there have been security bugs in the infrastructure which Estonia has been been aggressive in addressing, unlike DE, but that also matters in EE because they actually use the infrastructure.
When the chip IDs were rolled out in DE the Bundestag didn’t put in place any rules requiring that that banks or others be required to use the PKI (even only when offered and available) to protect and authenticate personal information. So of course the banks didn’t bother. Without any major use case, nobody else did either.
This was claimed at the time to be a way to let business lead, but really it was because business were happy not to have to provide extra privacy protection so lobbied against it.
Compare that to chips in credit cards in the 1990s: they really cared about protecting money so put in all sorts of rules to make the use mandatory.
I, and a lot of people I know, microwave their German ID cards immediately upon receiving them.
Bad enough that German citizens are required by law to have a valid ID card in the first place (see Ausweispflicht). Something pretty unique and a relic from the third Reich. We don‘t need more data on them. It will be leaked, it will be misused, it will have exploitable mistakes. ID cards should stay a dumb piece of plastic.
I wouldn’t bother to do that myself, though it’s harmless since there’s essentially no infrastructure support for the chip in DE, which is my complaint. The chip only contains the info readable on the card plus what you want to store there (public keys, basically) and can’t be read remotely.
I agree with you that mandatory ID cards are an affront to human rights, but you are sadly wrong to consider it unique to Germany. Quite the contrary: apart from commonwealth countries and the USA they required by all other OECD countries and many others besides (e.g. India, China, Malaysia, Russia…)
Their origin predates the nazi era too. For example passport system was introduced on a “temporary” basis during WWI but rather than revoking it several countries used it as the foundation of their ID system.
Good! German opposition and political activists desperately need good encryption to organize! Large opposition party was placed under surveillance before election, its leaders wiretapped. Today activists are monitored on Internet by secret services.
Just today the German online IT magazine heise.de published an article [0] claiming that the interior ministers (home secretaries?) will expect from social platforms like WhatsApp to implement backdoors so that the government can access a copy of the data. This is a wish they've been having for ages.
The AFD, a right wing party with quite a few ties to known neo-nazis or nazi symphatizers/apologists and also quite a bit of ties to some of the uglier right wing extremism that pops up its ugly head in Germany every once in a while. For example, there were a few arrests near the Polish border recently of some people who took it upon themselves to do a little policing in that area.
Also, it's easy to forget that this country had active right wing and left wing terrorists not so long ago.
So, yes Germany may have slightly overstepped their authority putting AFD party members under surveillance considering it is now a major party in several of its states and of course the parliament. In that sense it's a big scandal actually. But it's not entirely without reason. There are some really shady and scary people associating themselves with that party.
Wonderful how many good changes are happening so quickly with the new government. Merkel held power uninterrupted for over 18 years straight. The new leadership is basically Trump's campaign promise, for Germany (anti-globalist elite), but without all the backlash and manufactured outrage.
I guess these anti-globalist ideas have had enough time to percolate that even HN is supporting their fruits now.
Well, these are not changes yet, these are intentions (though good ones). Let's see what they can achieve, and whether they will stick to their promises when confronting tough problems.
The history of encryption it includes doesn’t dwell West Germany.
The West German government had a reputation for supporting strong crypto (unlike the East Germans and Nazis).
They were aware that many of their day-to-day communications were being intercepted by the East Germans (much as they intercepted East German communications).
Many West Germans had loved ones in East Germany who could at least in theory face negative consequences for the actions of West Germans.
West Germany simply couldn’t be free without strong crypto.
This is such a weird take, considering the reality how the NSA mass spying on Germans, and even Merkel, is quite legal and has been for many decades [0].
So while NATO forces are really big on supporting "strong crypto" for their own practical needs, what they were not really big on is supporting strong privacy rights for them West German people, as that would just "complicate" finding all those Communist spies and sympathizers.
Who were suspected to be everywhere, as split Germany was pretty much the main battlefield of the covert cold war.
That's why the West German G-10 law was specifically modified [1] at the request of the NSA [2] to legalize their, and that of NATO forces, mass spying on German citizens.
Btw: In terms of "Nazi encryption" it's a bit odd to make a statement like that, the Nazis, just like the USSR, the US, or pretty much any formal military force, did and still do use "strong crpyto" for their own needs [3].
That's why conflating encryption tech with privacy rights, as if they're just synonyms, is quite misleading.
Germany and the US have completely different electoral and legislative systems.
The US, notably has single member districts with plurality voting, which is extremely likely to produce two dominant parties. That's combined with a Senate that requires a supermajority to pass most legislation. Add a little more polarization than usual to that mix and the government can't legislate.
Neither plurality voting nor the filibuster rule are in the constitution. States have the authority to determine their own voting systems, and two states, Maine and Alaska have adopted instant-runoff voting for some elections. The Senate has the authority to change its rules, and has chosen to keep the filibuster in something resembling its present form since the 1970s with a small number of exceptions.
> That's combined with a Senate that requires a supermajority to pass most legislation
And which is elected in such a way that it is unlikely to represent the will of the people; it represents the will of the constituent _states_ (kind of). Which, where one has a powerful federal government, is a rather weird setup.
It wasn't designed for a powerful federal government. The federal government was meant to be stronger than it was under the original articles of confederation, but didn't gain much of its current scope until the 20th century.
The way Senate is constituted was a major compromise to begin with, and that compromise was made in mind with the states as it existed then; the numbers (both the count of large vs small states, and their relative size) have changed drastically to the point where the original compromise hardly makes sense anymore.
It should be noted that the Founders themselves saw the problems inherent in such an approach. Hamilton, Federalist Papers #22 [1]:
"Every idea of proportion and every rule of fair representation conspire to condemn a principle, which gives to Rhode Island an equal weight in the scale of power with Massachusetts, or Connecticut, or New York; and to Delaware an equal voice in the national deliberations with Pennsylvania, or Virginia, or North Carolina. Its operation contradicts the fundamental maxim of republican government, which requires that the sense of the majority should prevail. Sophistry may reply, that sovereigns are equal, and that a majority of the votes of the States will be a majority of confederated America. But this kind of logical legerdemain will never counteract the plain suggestions of justice and common-sense. It may happen that this majority of States is a small minority of the people of America; and two thirds of the people of America could not long be persuaded, upon the credit of artificial distinctions and syllogistic subtleties, to submit their interests to the management and disposal of one third. The larger States would after a while revolt from the idea of receiving the law from the smaller. To acquiesce in such a privation of their due importance in the political scale, would be not merely to be insensible to the love of power, but even to sacrifice the desire of equality. It is neither rational to expect the first, nor just to require the last. The smaller States, considering how peculiarly their safety and welfare depend on union, ought readily to renounce a pretension which, if not relinquished, would prove fatal to its duration."
And further:
"To give a minority a negative upon the majority (which is always the case where more than a majority is requisite to a decision), is, in its tendency, to subject the sense of the greater number to that of the lesser. Congress, from the nonattendance of a few States, have been frequently in the situation of a Polish diet, where a single VOTE has been sufficient to put a stop to all their movements. A sixtieth part of the Union, which is about the proportion of Delaware and Rhode Island, has several times been able to oppose an entire bar to its operations. This is one of those refinements which, in practice, has an effect the reverse of what is expected from it in theory. The necessity of unanimity in public bodies, or of something approaching towards it, has been founded upon a supposition that it would contribute to security. But its real operation is to embarrass the administration, to destroy the energy of the government, and to substitute the pleasure, caprice, or artifices of an insignificant, turbulent, or corrupt junto, to the regular deliberations and decisions of a respectable majority. In those emergencies of a nation, in which the goodness or badness, the weakness or strength of its government, is of the greatest importance, there is commonly a necessity for action. The public business must, in some way or other, go forward. If a pertinacious minority can control the opinion of a majority, respecting the best mode of conducting it, the majority, in order that something may be done, must conform to the views of the minority; and thus the sense of the smaller number will overrule that of the greater, and give a tone to the national proceedings. Hence, tedious delays; continual negotiation and intrigue; contemptible compromises of the public good. And yet, in such a system, it is even happy when such compromises can take place: for upon some occasions things will not admit of accommodation; and then the measures of government must be injuriously suspended, or fatally defeated. It is often, by the impracticability of obtaining the concurrence of the necessary number of votes, kept in a state of inaction. Its situation must always savor of weakness, sometimes border upon anarchy."
This last part in particular sounds very much like modern federal politics, does it not?
Now, this all has been written originally about the Articles of Confederation - under which every state had a single vote in the (unicameral) Congress - to promote the new Constitution, then still to be ratified. But the arguments remain valid. More so, in fact, because one of the complaints above is that the smallest constituent state contains only 1/60th of the entire population of the Union; but in modern US, this ratio is 1/500th (Wyoming)!
Not really. It's mostly a clown show orchestrated by old people that have never touched a computer and still think the internet is a new thing in 2021. Sometimes by pure chance something good happens, but is then soon attacked again. Examples: The Vorratsdatenspeicherung (metadata surveilance) is suggested again and again but then gets shut down by some court. Only to be revived again when Football distracts the masses. The Hackerparagraf puts you at legal risk working or developing exploits, upload filters supposedly check everything you upload for copyright infringement, Leistungsschutzrecht tries to keep obsolete paper based business models alive. There are public projects that tried to use 5 blockchains and other embarassing nonsense. It's tiring.
I think the main issues are polarization and the two party political landscape for you guys across the pond. Don't forget that the grass often seems greener on the other side, we here in germany also have a lot of polarization going on esp. in recent times. Also these coalition agreements are not reliable, politicians talk a lot if the day is long, we'll have to wait and see what actually comes of it.
If we had to start over on eradicating Smallpox today, we would be completely screwed. The only reason vaccine mandates are necessary is because people are apparently considerably more stupid than they were 70 years ago.
I'm not really sure how that is relevant. Both diseases are transmissible and deadly enough to completely overwhelm our hospitals for months at a time. Covid isn't just a random cold or flu. It is destroying our healthcare system, and the only way it will stop is with herd immunity.
We are closing in on 780,000 total deaths from Covid in the US. More than a quarter of those were working age adults two years ago.
A vaccine mandate has about 80% support in Germany. OP is axe-grinding for a pretty small minority here.
I don’t know if people are generally any more stupid now. I think it’s just that our media elevates these uninformed voices and amplifies these stupid points of view, treating both sides as possibly right, when one is so obviously wrong.
I used to believe this, until one of our political parties officially adopted the position that the 2020 election was stolen from them, and states like Florida and Alaska put vaccine and mask skeptics in charge of their health programs.
The people who believe this nonsense still aren't a majority, but they are now a large enough constituency to affect actual public policy. They are enabled by another large group who choose to ignore the insanity because it is politically convenient for them. I find all of this beyond terrifying. I stand by my statement: Smallpox could never be eradicated in 2021.
> I used to believe this, until one of our political parties officially adopted the position that the 2020 election was stolen from them
That's not new, though, really; it's new for the US, but it's a pretty common thing in the developing world (and was somewhat common in Europe pre-WW2).
The right sort of leader could absolutely have caused a similar reaction in the US 70 years ago, and the US _did_ have another weird political moment around that time; the McCarthyist panic. If McCarthy had been a weird narcissistic president rather than a paranoid, and then lost re-election, what do you think would have happened?
> It was either forcefully vaccinated or forcefully infected by the unvaccinated. I’m thankful we’re making the right choice.
False dichotomy.
Also what if you are wrong? You seem very certain. Why? No meaningful discussion is allowed, so how is it that you feel you have all the information you need to make the decision -- first for yourself, and second, for every other person in your country? It seems like you are just thankful your fears about your neighbors have been tranquilized? Where did those fears come from again?
It’s been discussed to death, literally. It’s hard to believe you’re asking for a discussion in good faith, when there’s clearly no evidence on your side, and your baseless “skepticism” has been indulged for almost 2 full years by the government and media. The outgoing German government bent over backwards for you Querdenker, and that’s why we’re still in this mess.
You’re simply wrong. You’re entitled to your wrong opinion, but you’re no longer entitled to force the rest of us to suffer for it.
The list of times when scientists and politicians have been wrong or just lied is a long one.
Are you so sure they are right this time? You are probably no expert so it seems like you are just taking their word for it. Good thing they are telling you it's the right thing to do!
> You’re simply wrong. You’re entitled to your wrong opinion, but you’re no longer entitled to force the rest of us to suffer for it.
The only one making you suffer is you not some 'other'. You are choosing to let fear become a wedge.
As a moral exercise, consider that when you force people against their will to do anything, you necessarily assume responsibility for the results, unless you are an immoral person. Are you willing to assume that responsibility? The manufacturers of the products are not. This in particular is a big red flag.
How would you feel if the roles were reversed and it was you who did not want some medical procedure? What if others just discounted your position out of hand?
I agree, it’s bizarre the German government wants to enshrine the right to encryption in law, but is mulling whether to violate individual sovereignty and control over one’s body by imposing mandatory vaccinations.
I agree that a lot of theses restrictions are serous restrictions to civil liberties, but they are not fascistic in nature and our attitude towards the government is quite different than the attitude of ppl from the USA towards their government. I see the power of social media platforms and political radicalization as greater problems than pressure or even mandates for vaccines. What bugs be though is that when people voiced concerns about "indirect vaccine mandates"(=pressuring people to get vaccinated by excluding them from social gatherings, etc) the political mainstream claimed that that won't happen and that that are just right-wing conspiracy theories. I think these kinds of lies smell far more like fascism than vaccine mandates themselves
Why would they just let you in because of your family history? I presume your ancestors once left Germany to find a new country to live in and became successful there.
Not saying that Germany shouldn't "let you back in" if you want to immigrate back, but the mere fact that your ancestors were German should not qualify you more (safe for certain exceptional populations in recent war history) than others whose ancestors might for instance come from the UK.
Ah Grandpa (his father immigrated over in 1914) served in the Korean War. Other half of the family was a wave of German farmers to Texas mid civil war and served in the Confederate Army. I am lucky that they are strangely meticulous keepers of family history.
And then your child will forever have trouble opening a bank account, and will have to file and potentially pay taxes for their entire adult life even if they never set foot on US soil again. This "exploit" often isn't worth it, unless the child will 100% certainly live in the US when they grow up.
In all honesty, I don't/can't value government provided rights. The reason is governments have no basis to grant anything more than an individual.
If you think about it, if I grant you a right to privacy - what can that possibly mean to you? If not just I, but I and 10 others (or 100, or 10000) agree to grant you a right, still - what does that mean? Do you now have that right?
In fact, the position is nonsense.
The question then, is at what point do a bunch of people become a government? What is the magic number? And on what basis does a government have greater rights than the individuals it purports to represent?
The answer in reverse, is that government does not have greater rights than individuals. It does not determine morality. A majority of people might decide to rule over others - and they may be successful via their greater or co-ordinated force - but at no point does that use of force become a right. Put simply, if someone or a group or a government initiate force, that is a wrong. Re rights, you can do whatever as long as you are not harming another.
Governments are not greater than individuals. While we might go along with government dictats or government 'granting of rights', there is no moral basis for it. It is just the labouring under an illusion. The government illusion is powerful, for sure, and there is malign threat therein, but at no point can government create a right that is not already existent for the individual. If some people believe it can, they are mistaken. If those people undertake the dictats of government, acting forcibly against other that have done them no wrong, they are acting immorally.
In answer to the main post then, individuals have always had a right to encryption, if it is not harming anyone. Governments have never had the (moral) 'right' to decrypt as that is stealing someone's privacy. Governments can of course write laws to justify whatever they like, but these laws themselves need to align with morality to be 'right'.
PS I seriously don't mind being down-voted, but would rather understand what the objections are to my argument.
if I grant you a right to privacy - what can that possibly mean to you
But you do it all the time. If someone tells you something in confidence, you explicitly agree to respect their privacy. If you sleep with someone, you implicitly accept that the other won't broadcast the shape and size of your genitalia to the world. If you run into an acquaintance in public, you implicitly agree not to broadcast each other's whereabouts to the entire world. What's so difficult about the concept of privacy?
at what point do a bunch of people become a government? What is the magic number?
That question makes no sense: the magic number, if it exists, is one. If you want to fully understand why, you probably should pursue a multi-year education in international law.
government does not have greater rights than individuals
Governments don't have rights at all, so this is true. Governments have sovereignty and mandates instead.
[government] does not determine morality
Indeed it doesn't. But it does formalize and encode morality, in the form of laws. So rather than railing against this law as if it violates your tummy, maybe you'd be better served to understand the morality of the society whose government is drafting this law?
The government illusion is powerful
This is why you are downvoted, I think: you are expressing your feelings about government from a state of perpetual learned helplessness. The very idea that "the government is us", which is the core concept of democracy, seems alien to you. I know that this affliction (the feeling of not having a say in how your country is governed) is particularly prominent in the US, but it gets a bit old and trite to see commenters spouting their dysfunctional relationship with their own government onto every story, as if their traumas are universal truths. It's just noise, and adds nothing to the discussion.
> But you do it all the time. If someone tells you something in confidence, you explicitly agree to respect their privacy. If you sleep with someone, you implicitly accept that the other won't broadcast the shape and size of your genitalia to the world. If you run into an acquaintance in public, you implicitly agree not to broadcast each other's whereabouts to the entire world. What's so difficult about the concept of privacy?
No I don't. I may _respect_ another's privacy, but how can I grant that right? What authority do I have to grant a right to another? You are mistaken considerate behaviour for some magic/godly ability to grant rights.
> If you want to fully understand why, you probably should pursue a multi-year education in international law.
There is nothing in law that can explain the mechanism whereby one individual can grant a right to another. Well, perhaps you can say contract law can achieve something like this - eg if I already have a right (eg of freedom of movement) and then I sign a contract with another to say I will only exercise that right if they allow it.
But there is no implied contract that can be valid. No individual can assume that they do have the ability to allow others the right to freedom of movement. The contract would need to explicit - ie you would need to have signed it. Yet this is how government works.
You did NOT provide consent to government. Nothing was signed, yet the government assumes your are subject to its laws. There is no basis for this. (Arguably you do 'buy in' when you vote, but you can also withdraw).
If 'government' is a collection of individuals that believe they should be governed by the consensus of the group, ensure their laws and management structure is adopted by others that are outside the group, that self-govern? There is no moral right. Without consent there is only force.
> But it does formalize and encode morality, in the form of laws.
For sure it does not formalise nor encode my morality. Does it encode yours? Personally, I would not restrict others freedom of movement if they are not harming others. I would not force to accept my authority of their body (eg via mandatory vaccines).
> you are expressing your feelings about government from a state of perpetual learned helplessness. The very idea that "the government is us", which is the core concept of democracy, seems alien to you.
Government has nothing to do with me. It sees fit to inflict its 'laws' on me - but there is no morality to this, only force. It is a helpless situation though, that is true. I am a victim - as most other people really do believe in this illusion. They do not accept my right to govern myself. Even though I am not harming them (ie I am acting morally) they do see fit to act immorally against me - they will force me to act as their government has deemed fit. Eg they will force me to pay tax or force me to take 'medicine' despite my choice, or prevent me from going where I want, etc. Legality has nothing to do with this as government can write laws to make this legal
Government is a beast based in force - and has nothing to do with rights and wrongs. It is the mechanism of an elite class to manage people collectively and has - via education - has kidded us into believing the mechanism they control somehow relates to individuals.
The illusion is so strong most of us believe it is actually right to force others to do what it says!
> The question then, is at what point do a bunch of people become a government? What is the magic number? And on what basis does a government have greater rights than the individuals it purports to represent?
is a nonsense argument and it is the crux of the rest of your argument.
The answer to when adding a grain of sand to other grains of sand becomes a pile of sand is not 'never' even if there's no obvious dividing line.
Thanks for the link. This is exactly the problem with the belief in governmental authority.
Where does government get its authority from then?
I say it is from force, and that the force comes from many individual's false belief that government is right to do as it does.
Eg, if you find you don't agree with what government does, can you withdraw? Say you don't agree with government starting a war in another country, and decide not to pay taxes, will you go to jail?
Most people do see that there is no choice, that it is based in force. However, they will also try to rationalise their acceptance of the force, and in so doing propagate the beast.
> The answer in reverse, is that government does not have greater rights than individuals. It does not determine morality.
Morality is a rough one. Most people who study ethics and metaethics do follow moral realist positions, but positions under that umbrella are manifold. When you look outside of moral realist positions, there are even more positions.
So, the government doesn't govern morality, but even the people who study it can't form consensus.
> Governments can of course write laws to justify whatever they like, but these laws themselves need to align with morality to be 'right'.
Your problem isn't with rights or governmental egregores, it's with an inability to reconcile a morality with the turtles-all-the-way-down-esque social relations that summon said egregores.
Until your moral claims can said to be true, then my rights could contradict yours, and it might not be reconcilable. Here someone smarter than me might even consider that the job of government is to reconcile the infinite, inconsistent beliefs, and to give some basis of "rights."
> Until your moral claims can said to be true, then my rights could contradict yours, and it might not be reconcilable. Here someone smarter than me might even consider that the job of government is to reconcile the infinite, inconsistent beliefs, and to give some basis of "rights."
The moral claims I make are innately true to all individuals. You can pretend that government has the right to do that which you cannot do to another individual, but you would be wrong.
You can do what you like as long as you are not harming another.
A collection of people do not/cannot have greater rights than an individual. An individual cannot grant another a right eg to privacy. An individual can respect anothers right to privacy. Or he can disrespect that privacy. If he does disrespect that right, that individual has done a wrong.
This same method applies to groups. If 10 people decide to disrespect an individual's privacy, this is still a wrong. There is no number, no implied convention that can make disrespecting privacy the right thing!
> The moral claims I make are innately true to all individuals.
You need to convince me and ethicists, first because I could introduce you to some error theorists who would say otherwise. It's literal he-said, she-said with people choosing to believe what they want to believe in. Whether they base this in the categorical imperative or the bible.
To make it 100% clear what point I'm trying to make is this: you can't just make a normative statement or that your morals are globally valid. When you do so, you say X ought do Y. So you need to prove that "ought". Why ought X do Y? And what makes that normative claim applicable outside X?
> You can pretend that government has the right to do that which you cannot do to another individual, but you would be wrong.
I was never interested in doing so, just in saying that anything you consider to be a moral fact isn't verified.
> You can do what you like as long as you are not harming another.
Andrey Chikatilo would expand this a bit. So would Dahmer.
Government effective authority does not come from accepting its role as arbiter of morality, but it comes from people belief in the system of laws and government, beliefs about who is or should be given superior powers, like tools of mind control (schools,media) and matter control (police,army).
Of course one can think of oneself as being outside the power of government, and that is very powerful. Then some principles such as human rights are naturally seen as inalienable and independent of what any government says/legislates/enforces. Such independence of thinking and actions from the government is sometimes a highly moral position, like when people in Europe helped hide and save Jews from Gestapo.
But morality is not universal, people have different views, and the government and its tools are still there, they can threaten and hurt people. So many will usually choose to comply with the government restricted version of human rights, as long as it's bearable.
For the vast majority of the population you will not get much support for the Principle of Self-Ownership which is what you are talking about when you say
>The question then, is at what point do a bunch of people become a government? What is the magic number? And on what basis does a government have greater rights than the individuals it purports to represent?
To me and likely yourself the answer to this question is Never, the government never has more rights than the individuals
The US was (and I stress was) the last nation on the planet where this idea had even small roots in the ground as a foundational principle of governance, sadly that has been lost and any of those roots that may have been left were yanked out of the soil at the start of COVID.
Today the rule is "The needs of the many, outweigh any rights of the individual"
> Today the rule is "The needs of the many, outweigh any rights of the individual"
Yes, many people think this nowadays. I think because they did not experience the downsides of this or it is not relevant now.
I think most people tolerate manifestations of this quoted idea to some extent now, when it makes sense to them or it is close enough, and is bearable, like some of the pandemic restrictions.
True, this sets up a dangerous precedent, but I don't think it's certain most people completely bought the quoted idea in general. With some of the less sensible restrictions and mandates, many people realized just how wrong is to take that idea as gospel for every possible situation.
True. At least that's what they're told by the few who control their minds. Interestingly the many's supposed needs lead to worse and worse outcomes for them.
[0] https://blog.fefe.de/?ts=9f60b12e
[1] https://www.ccc.de/de/updates/2021/ccc-formulierungshilfe-re...
(both in German)