Libertarians and the Privacy of Friends
By Claire Wolfe 
[email protected]
Exclusive to The Libertarian Enterprise
         A decade ago, I was stalked by a man who threatened to kill me. 
When I realized no amount of cajoling, reasoning, legal action or 
avoidance would end his obsession, I left town and left the state, 
telling just three close friends where I was headed.
         All three were sworn to secrecy. All three understood what I 
faced. All three knew my stalker was notorious for using subterfuges 
to get information. Yet eventually, two of them, quite casually, gave 
my address and phone number to the first people who asked for it.
         "Oh, but she said it was urgent to get in touch with you." 
         "Oh, but he was an old client of yours." 
         Nobody asked me first. As it turned out, none of the three 
revealed my whereabouts to the stalker, either. But by then it was a 
moot point.
         I had already revealed my own location, entirely by accident. 
         It was one of those simple, unthinking things. I left a change of 
address form with the post office. Confidential, right? But my 
former state's Libertarian Party affiliate sent a third-class mailing 
with "address correction requested." The post office gave them my new 
address. My stalker had access to the party's mailing list. 
         I moved again.
         My stalker is long gone. Nevertheless, the experience has stayed 
with me, leaving me cautious and wary. I was amazed to learn how easy 
it is to blow apart my own privacy, or have it blown, in all 
innocence, by careless friends.
         Since then, I've also taken steps not only to guard information 
about my physical location, but about every sort of personal 
information. My informal motto has become, "Be paranoid. It's good 
for you." 
         Nevertheless, my privacy is occasionally violated from unexpected 
quarters. I see the same thing happening to others, as well.
         Some cases in point:
         Recently, I received a phone call from someone I'd never met. I 
was actually delighted to hear from him, since he was someone whose 
work I'd long admired. But I was puzzled as to how he had come by my 
unlisted telephone number. "I got it from X." 
         But how had X gotten it? From Y. And how had Y gotten it? From 
Z. And how had Z gotten it? From A -- who had in turn gotten it from 
me with instructions to share it with no one. None of these people 
intend me the slightest harm. Quite the contrary. But I'm surprised 
that not one of them stopped and asked, "Should I give out this 
information?"
         The second case occurred just this morning -- and has much more 
ominous overtones. A friend -- who very carefully did not violate 
my privacy -- forwarded an e-mail he had received from a rather 
emotional stranger. The stranger was trying to locate my snail 
address, e-mail address or phone number. He had done a net search on 
me, and listed the things he had been able to learn in half an hour. 
         He was steaming with frustration that he had found no contact 
information. My temperature rose over something he had been able 
to find -- my weekend travel plans! Someone else had evidently posted 
them to a public e-mail list and there they were, revealed by a simple 
session with an internet search engine.
         Something similar recently happened to a prominent LP activist. 
He asked a supporter to make hotel reservations for him and, for 
whatever reason, the supporter posted the reservation to a public 
list, complete with dates, hotel name and confirmation number. The 
activist was not a subscriber to this list, so he wasn't aware this 
very private information had gone public. Anyone with access to the 
list could have used that information to stalk the activist, record 
his movements or even pretend to be him.
         Again, in both these cases, no actual harm was done. The stranger 
found my travel plans only after I'd returned home. A list 
subscriber got a message to the activist's wife. The activist stayed 
elsewhere. 
         But the potential for harm was considerable. Sadly, both 
violations were committed by libertarians.
         Do I know of anyone who wants to harm me or the activist?  No. 
Can we ever be confident someone does not want to harm us? No 
again. And double ditto given the fact of our outspoken advocacy of 
resistance to unjust government power.
         I expect libertarians, of all people, to know better than to 
violate others' privacy. But it ain't necessarily so.
         And as you can see by the example at the top of this story, 
sometimes the most stringent warnings carry no weight. People forget. 
It isn't their life that might be in danger. It isn't their personal 
security at risk. The person asking them for the information "seems 
okay." ("You couldn't have possibly have meant I shouldn't tell good 
old Joe!") They don't have enough at stake to inspire them to take 
someone else's privacy seriously.
         Alas, after bitching about the sins of others, I must confess that 
I, too, have sometimes violated others' privacy. For instance, I once 
published a person's address without asking his permission. Because 
this person had posted his address to various Fidonet echoes in the 
past, I felt reasonably secure using the information, and when there 
was no time to ask, I just did it. Fortunately, when I later met the 
person at a gathering, his only complaint was that I hadn't included 
his new e-mail address and web page. 
         Nevertheless, I apologized to him. I made the wrong choice. I 
will always, in the future, take the most prudent course and not 
risk revealing personal information. Because, next time, an apology 
may come too late.
         I don't merely want to bitch and confess. I also want to thank 
the many people who have cherished and helped guard their friends' 
privacy -- all the people who've checked before giving out information 
about others, or who have used their own judgment to turn aside 
inquiries from people who "just didn't seem right." Within the very 
ranks of this publication, there are several such wonderful human 
beings. They are precious friends to have, and they will be precious 
allies when the fight for freedom escalates. 
         The world can be a dangerous place for anybody. But as the world 
becomes an even more dangerous place for political dissidents, we 
need, more than ever, to have good, careful friends on our side.
         With that in mind (and because I slip, too) I've created, with 
Charles Curley's help, a 10-point list for my own reference. Maybe 
someone else will find this list helpful, too. Maybe someone will add 
to it, because the lesson of my experience says I can't think of 
everything.
The All-Purpose Protecting Other People's Privacy List:
1. Never, never, ever give out anyone's phone number or snail address 
without first checking with the person. Don't even think about it. 
Just make it a routine. 
2. Use discretion when giving out anyone's e-mail address. Even 
though e-mail addresses tend to be more widely distributed and less 
confidential than street addresses, they can still be misused. When 
in doubt, ask.
3. Remember that some e-mail addresses point to people's physical 
locations. Workplace domains, like those of Hewlett-Packard or 
Microsoft, can lead strangers practically to a person's office. So 
can college and university (.edu) domains. Don't give these out 
without express permission.
4. When sending electronic mailings to a list of people, send the 
message to yourself and bcc (blind copy) everyone else, unless all the 
people you're sending to know each other, or unless you can personally 
vouch for the good character of them all. Using this method, no one's 
address but yours appears on the message. 
5. Never, never, ever post any form of personal information about 
someone to a public e-mail list or Usenet group. No matter how small 
and intimate we may think some of these discussion groups are, we 
have no way of knowing who might be lurking, or for what purpose. 
All Usenet groups and many e-mail lists are archived. Information 
that may appear harmless now may not be so harmless in five or ten 
years.
6. If you store personal information about friends or political 
acquaintances anywhere on your computer, encrypt it. 
7. Be aware of what's on your screen when others are present or when 
you leave the room. Have a quick way of blanking the screen or 
closing out a program. When in low-tech mode, make sure never to 
leave envelopes, address books, etc. where others can see them.
8. Occasionally, someone might want to snail mail something to an 
acquaintance of yours. In that case, you could offer to forward the 
missive. Tell the person making the request to give you the message 
in a stamped, open envelope. Address the envelope and insert a note 
telling the recipient how you came to be sending the package. The 
recipient can decide whether to respond.
9. Beware the "innocent" questions of strangers! Headhunters, feds, 
detectives and other snoops routinely begin with "harmless" questions 
when tracking down information.
10. Make sure any organizations in which you are involved -- 
especially libertarian ones! -- adopt similar practices. 
         And when you run into a situation not covered by this list, 
remember: Be paranoid. It's good for you. And it's good for your 
friends, as well.
Claire Wolfe is the author of 101 Things to Do 'Til the Revolution
(Loompanics Unlimited, 1996). Her next book, I Am Not a Number!, 
dealing with resistance to the national ID card and related federal 
databases, will be released in early 1998. Claire's e-mail address at 
the top of this article was provided with her express permission.