Hamilton Herald Masthead

Editorial


Front Page - Friday, March 14, 2025

Is it possible to stay safe in world stripped of privacy?




Peek-a-boo. Yep, somebody sees you there. You can’t hide, you’re too big to slink away unnoticed, and there’s no boy wizard to make you invisible.

For your entire life, you’ve left trails behind wherever you go, footprints and evidence of your presence and behavior. Just thinking about that might feel weird, but once you’ve read “On Privacy” by Lawrence Cappello it might seem exactly right.

Go ahead, admit it: You have secrets. Everybody does, and that’s OK. There are some things you just don’t want to share. In fact, Cappello says, it’s best if you don’t because “secrets [can] impact people in positive ways.” Keeping certain things to yourself actually enhances your mental well-being and makes closer relationships possible.

And yet, you hand strangers your personal information every day, whether it’s on-purpose or by accident. For instance, fill out a registration form or giveaway slip and boom! You’ve just given out your individual, unique data. Or you got scammed online. Or you didn’t do anything but log in to a computer at a hotel or you used public Wi-Fi and your data is simply taken without your awareness.

That’s terrifying, but Cappello didn’t write this book to scare anyone. He says panic and apathy aren’t the right actions here, nor is scolding anyone who isn’t even trying to keep themselves or you safe and your privacy private.

Is there even such a thing as privacy anymore? Cappello says there is, and smart people take steps to make sure it remains so.

• Know what happens to your data, once it’s taken and learn to safeguard all your devices.

• Lobby for your right to be forgotten, online and otherwise.

• Know how to opt out on data sharing and never use public Wi-Fi.

• When dealing with police or the TSA, watch for “evasive language.”

• Remember your cellphone is basically a tracking device.

• And, finally, “take a hard look at what digital architects call ‘Privacy by Design.’

The walls have eyes. So do your bank, your computer, your favorite restaurant, the elevator to work and maybe your neighbor’s house. And if the very idea of all that makes you squirm, you need this book.

Meant for anyone who’s stuck between wanting privacy and wondering if worry is silly, “On Privacy” isn’t meant to fear-monger. Instead, the author offers a balanced way to think about covertness, revealing and how to manage both sides.

This guided tour is done in an easy-to-understand way that entertains while also helping readers with methods for arming one’s self against pushy naysayers and ideas to further protect that which you want to keep on the Q-T for your workplace and personally.

Absolutely, this is a book for conspiracy theorists, but those who prefers to err on the side of caution will probably find it to be more useful. If that’s you, then grab this short book; “On Privacy” is worth a good long peek.

Terri Schlichenmeyer’s reviews of business books are read in more than 260 publications in the U.S. and Canada.