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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/42539764

Privacy, the debate in the United States since 1945

This volume argues that privacy was built into the Constitution as originally written and into the Bill of Rights. [The book examines] governmental interference with privacy [and] the extent to which the government has as obligation to protect citizens from violations of their privacy by other citizens - as in the maintenance of computer data banks by private companies. [The book also looks at the] leaps in technology that gave us television, computers, and governmental ability to monitor citizens' lives; [and] concerns about national security as the United States entered the Cold War ...-Introd.

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  • "This volume argues that privacy was built into the Constitution as originally written and into the Bill of Rights. [The book examines] governmental interference with privacy [and] the extent to which the government has as obligation to protect citizens from violations of their privacy by other citizens - as in the maintenance of computer data banks by private companies. [The book also looks at the] leaps in technology that gave us television, computers, and governmental ability to monitor citizens' lives; [and] concerns about national security as the United States entered the Cold War ...-Introd."@en

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  • "Privacy: the debate in the United State since 1945"
  • "Privacy : the debate in the United States since 1945"
  • "Privacy, the debate in the United States since 1945"@en
  • "Privacy: the debate in the United States since 1945"