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<updated>2009-11-09T05:26:37Z</updated>
<title>Comments for Where do you draw the line between private and public discourse?</title>
<subtitle>Your guide to the digital media revolution, with host Mark Glaser.</subtitle>
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<published>2008-04-14T21:51:41Z</published>
<updated>2008-04-16T16:43:10Z</updated>
<title>Where do you draw the line between private and public discourse?</title>
<summary>In the age of the Internet, with so many cameraphones and videophones, no one can feel like they are having a private conversation anymore. There is always a blogger or someone nearby seemingly recording every moment, whether it&apos;s a celebrity trying to take a vacation or Sen. Barack Obama having a &quot;private fundraiser&quot; in San Francisco. In the latter case,...</summary>
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<![CDATA[<p>In the age of the Internet, with so many cameraphones and videophones, no one can feel like they are having a private conversation anymore. There is always a blogger or someone nearby seemingly recording every moment, whether it's a celebrity trying to take a vacation or Sen. Barack Obama having a "private fundraiser" in San Francisco. In the latter case, Huffington Post blogger <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mayhill-fowler/obama-no-surprise-that-ha_b_96188.html">Mayhill Fowler recorded his talk</a>, which included the comment about people in Pennsylvania being bitter -- something that was fodder for his political opponents. So what do you think should be private and what is public? Should private emails be posted on your blog? Hidden-camera photos or videos? Does it depend on the person being recorded (i.e. if they're a public figure)? Tell us a story about something you thought was private that got out online. I'll run the best comments and stories in the next Your Take Roundup.</p>]]>

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<id>tag:www.pbs.org,2008:/mediashift//4.4707-comment:80275</id>
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<title>Comment from Mike Ho on 2008-04-15</title>
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<name>Mike Ho</name>
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I would turn the question around: Rather than asking where the line is for the Internet in general, I would say each person needs to guard his or her own line of privacy.

I have friends who make it clear in their signature blocks that they consider any e-mail to be fair game for Internet publishing unless you say not to, others who wouldn&apos;t dream of doing such a thing or don&apos;t have an Internet &quot;printing press,&quot; and loads of in-betweeners.

In such an environment, I think the onus falls on the writer.  I had one person I interviewed by e-mail who, before he would say a thing, wanted to make sure I wouldn&apos;t slap his e-mails unedited all over the Internet.  I think he was on to something.  It is, unfortunately, each individual&apos;s job to guard his or her privacy, just as it is in the world of junk mail.

I will say, however, that people sometimes communicate really juicy things at completely inappropriate volumes in public on their cell phones.  I consider them to be fair game for being blogged.  They&apos;ve made the decision to air their dirty laundry in public at high volume. If my friends and I can get a laugh out of it, so much the better.

As far as hidden cameras and microphones, with the ubiquity of cell phones that do this and video too, I think nobody can assume that there&apos;s anywhere to hide. Especially for public figures, everything you say out loud can and will become public.  The days of Ronald Reagan thinking the microphone was off are over.  

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<published>2008-04-15T23:44:34Z</published>
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