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Chris Butler
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Protect the Future... It's the law?

June 4, 2009 at 8:00 am by Chris



This was an intriguing bit for all you futurists out there: Andrew Revkin, in his New York Times "Dot Earth" blog post, A Push to Stop Crimes Against the Future, quotes C.G. Weeramantry, a member of the council and former vice president of the International Court of Justice, who says,
"We are today using international law in a heartless fashion, for we think only of those who are alive here and now and shut our eyes to the rest of the vast family of humanity who are yet to come. This forecloses to future generations their rights to the basic fundamentals of civilized existence: acknowledging them as holders of rights in the eyes of our law.”
On one hand, I like this idea. After all, who could argue with thinking ahead and doing so being mindful of how one's decisions might affect future generations? This is essentially at the route of the moral argument for environmental conservation- protecting the availability of resources and a life-supporting environment for our children and beyond. But on the other hand, I find myself skeptical of our ability to always accurately predict the long-term affects of our decisions, such that we may end up making a harmful decision that appears beneficial, even in terms of projected ramifications. In other words, without the perspective of hindsight, how will we really know how to "stop crimes against the future?" This is a bit of a Minority Report-like problem, but without the precognition.

Revkin ends by asking, "Are we mature enough as a species to safeguard the rights of future generations without the threat of a day in court?" Realistically, in terms of maturity, probably not. We tend to be myopic in this regard, and I think we all know it. But assuming we grow in maturity and start thinking like time travelers in order to protect the future, we still have the limitation of being in the now looking at the future, rather than being in the future looking at the past.

Tagsstrategy privacy the-future

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Comments


 Anonymous June 5, 2009 11:42 AM
This is a step in the wrong direction legally. How can you create a legal system that is based on and responds to unforseen factors?
 Chris Butler June 5, 2009 3:23 PM
Anonymous,

This is a good point- one that I'm concerned about, too, which is why I mentioned Minority Report. It seems to me that what we're really talking about here is stewardship, or the idea of doing our best to consider others in how we use resources, establish rules, build things, etc. But legal protection could be a Pandora's Box of it's own, I'd imagine.

Thanks for reading,

Chris
 A.J. June 8, 2009 4:05 PM
Chris, how do you see something like this affecting web developers or companies like yours?
 Chris June 9, 2009 10:29 PM
A.J.,

A good question- As far as some of this potential lawmaking is concerned, I don't see it having many direct effects upon us at this point. However, I fully expect that there will be new laws and restrictions that will change how we do things within the next decade. Specifically, I'm keeping a close eye upon legal issues surrounding the protection of stored data. Depending upon how laws protecting data storage change, we could end up having to adapt and do a few things differently.

In general, we're trying to stay at the front end of many areas of technological flux. We believe that investing in staying "ahead of the curve" will continue to enable our company to thrive.

Chris