Report on the Committee on Privacy
Home Office
Sold by Crappy Old Books, Barry, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since February 6, 2025
Used - Soft cover
Condition: Used - Fair
Ships from United Kingdom to U.S.A.
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSold by Crappy Old Books, Barry, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since February 6, 2025
Condition: Used - Fair
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketBehold: Report on the Committee on Privacy (1972) ? a slim, earnest HMSO production from the age when privacy was still something you could reasonably discuss without immediately summoning satellites, social media, cookies, facial recognition, and that one app you downloaded in 2014 that still knows where you live. This is the Home Office taking a long, careful look at the concept of privacy with the kind of sober, committee-led seriousness that only Britain can truly deliver: pages of measured language, cautious conclusions, and that unmistakable civil-service tone which implies that if we all remain calm, take notes, and form a sub-committee, we might yet keep modernity from getting too cheeky. And what a moment in time: 1972 . A world of landlines, paper records, manual files, and the terrifying emerging idea that information might be stored and retrieved quickly . It?s the pre-digital anxiety era ? not ?your phone is listening,? but ?should an organisation be allowed to keep a list?? It?s privacy with pipe smoke, filing cabinets, and the faint hum of a mainframe somewhere in the background like a future threat. If you enjoy reading the origin story of ?we should probably think about this,? then this is your cup of lukewarm institutional tea. Condition (Fair, but honest) This copy is Fair and has a small physical quirk that feels strangely appropriate for a document about privacy: it?s a bit warped . It spent some time lying in a pile of books ? as many important government reports do, both literally and metaphorically ? and came out slightly out of shape. It has since been flattened , but like any bureaucratic process, it may take a little time to fully settle back into polite conformity. The good news: Complete Bound well Readable and respectable Reasonable overall condition Just? a gentle ripple of lived experience , as if it has been waiting fifty years for someone to finally care what it thinks. Why you want it Because it?s a wonderfully dry artefact of a moment when privacy was still arguable , still definable , still something you could write a report about and then return to your office to type up another report about. It?s also an excellent prop for anyone who enjoys the delicious irony of reading about privacy while being tracked by thirty invisible scripts. Ideal for: collectors of government reports and social-history ephemera privacy/history/legal-policy nerds anyone who likes the idea of the state earnestly pondering the limits of intrusion people who enjoy dystopias in their early, optimistic draft form A quietly fascinating slice of 1970s institutional Britain ? careful, concerned, and determined to manage the future with a stapled spine and a sensible heading. Crappy Old Books offers it in all its slightly warped glory: still doing its job, still making its case, and still politely asking whether anyone might like to consider the implications.
Seller Inventory # 5805
| Order quantity | 14 to 45 business days | 5 to 10 business days |
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| First item | US$ 26.95 | US$ 36.09 |
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