Abstract
My thesis is simple. The right of informational privacy, the great
modern achievement often attributed to the classic Samuel Warren and
Louis Brandeis article, “The Right to Privacy” (1890),
asserts an individual's right not to have private personal
information circulated. Warren and Brandeis claimed that individual
dignity in a modern society requires that people be able to keep their
private lives to themselves and proposed that the common law should be
understood to protect this dignity by making dissemination of private
information a tort. As broadly stated, this right not to have private
information distributed directly conflicts with a broadly conceived
freedom of speech and of the press. My claim is that, in cases of
conflict, the law should reject the Warren and Brandeis innovation.
Speech and press freedom should prevail; the privacy tort should be
ignored. This conclusion requires a normative argument concerning the
appropriate basis and status of speech freedom that this essay will not
really provide but for which I have argued elsewhere. Here, instead, I
will describe that theory of speech freedom, explore its implications
for informational privacy, and finally suggest some reasons to think
that rejection of the privacy tort should not be so troubling and is,
in fact, pragmatically desirable.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,Philosophy
Cited by
13 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Free Speech, Privacy, and Autonomy;SSRN Electronic Journal;2021
2. FREE SPEECH, PRIVACY, AND AUTONOMY;Social Philosophy and Policy;2020
3. Rumors Help the Enemy! Gossip in Politics;Gossip, Epistemology, and Power;2017
4. The Word On the Street: Gossip’s Contributions to Knowledge;Gossip, Epistemology, and Power;2017
5. Gossip’s Bad Reputation;Gossip, Epistemology, and Power;2017