Recently, Jakob Thraine Mainz and Rasmus Uhrenfeldt defended a control-based conception of a moral right to privacy (Mainz and Uhrenfeldt, Res Publica, 2020)—focusing on conceptualizing necessary and jointly sufficient conditions for a privacy right violation. This reply comments on a number of mistakes they make, which have long reverberated through the debate on the conceptions of privacy and the right to privacy and therefore deserve to be corrected. Moreover, the reply provides a sketch of a general response for defending the limited access conception of the right to privacy against control-based intuitions
Although popular, control accounts of privacy suffer from various counterexamples. In this article, ...
Ignorance theorists about privacy hold that it amounts to others' ignorance of one's personal inform...
The right to privacy is conceived from different point of views. This causes a state of ambiguity in...
Recently, Jakob Thraine Mainz and Rasmus Uhrenfeldt defended a control-based conception of a moral r...
Over the years, several counterexamples arguably establish the limits of control-based conceptions o...
In opposition to what we claimed in Unfit for the Future, Jan Christoph Bublitz argues that people h...
Lauritz Munch and Björn Lundgren have recently replied to a paper published by us in this journal. I...
The right to privacy seems to occupy an entirely natural place within the structure of human rights;...
The right to privacy is not recognised at common law. However, like many other rights, it has ...
For three decades, the right to privacy has served as a constitutional limit on governmental power. ...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
Conjoined with the claim that there is a moral right to privacy, each of the major contemporary acco...
Although popular, control accounts of privacy suffer from various counterexamples. In this article, ...
Ignorance theorists about privacy hold that it amounts to others' ignorance of one's personal inform...
The right to privacy is conceived from different point of views. This causes a state of ambiguity in...
Recently, Jakob Thraine Mainz and Rasmus Uhrenfeldt defended a control-based conception of a moral r...
Over the years, several counterexamples arguably establish the limits of control-based conceptions o...
In opposition to what we claimed in Unfit for the Future, Jan Christoph Bublitz argues that people h...
Lauritz Munch and Björn Lundgren have recently replied to a paper published by us in this journal. I...
The right to privacy seems to occupy an entirely natural place within the structure of human rights;...
The right to privacy is not recognised at common law. However, like many other rights, it has ...
For three decades, the right to privacy has served as a constitutional limit on governmental power. ...
The problem of privacy today is no longer—if it ever was—a distinctly legal problem. On the contrary...
Conjoined with the claim that there is a moral right to privacy, each of the major contemporary acco...
Although popular, control accounts of privacy suffer from various counterexamples. In this article, ...
Ignorance theorists about privacy hold that it amounts to others' ignorance of one's personal inform...
The right to privacy is conceived from different point of views. This causes a state of ambiguity in...