The Privacy Spiral Much of our modern legal concept of personal privacy took form in the 1970s, when concern about governmental intrusion was at a peak. Congress distilled into law the principle that bureaucrats should closely guard what private data they keep on us. Since then, that legal principle has been manipulated into both a pretext for government secrecy and a backdoor defamation tort. Journalists, caught in the middle of those twists, and desperate to guard their work, have been left to argue for a reinterpretation of the law. This warped concept of privacy protection has served the government well, perhaps. But what about the rest of us? A report in four parts. © 2009 The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press |