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How should the government balance the tensions between privacy

How should the government balance the tensions between privacy and national security concerns? Is the Constitution clear about potential conflicts between privacy and national security?

How should the government balance the tensions between privacy and national security concerns?

* Read the Pew Research article, “Americans feel the tensions between privacy and security concerns.”

And then answer and discuss all questions bellowed.
*** LINK: https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/02/19/americans-feel-the-tensions-between-privacy-andsecurity-concerns/

How should the government balance the tensions between privacy and national security concerns?

Is the Constitution clear about potential conflicts between privacy and national security?

How much privacy should Americans expect in an age where information about people is so readily available?

***INSTRUCTIONS***
The submissions should be several substantial paragraphs (minimum 300 words).

Also, you should use New Courier or Times New Roman, 12 point font, double-spacing, and one inch margins on all four sides of the paper.

More Details:

In addition, twenty-first-century technologies and services—from social media to online transactions

—aggregate “big data,” or large data sets that may be analyzed to reveal patterns and connections.

Big data helps governments and business trace trends in human behavior and track correlations between seemingly disjointed data sets, giving them

an advantage when tackling major challenges.

However, in the wake of a transnational cyberattack that was initially in report in Ukraine and quickly spread across the world on June 27,

the second of its kind in as many months, the security of personal information in store in cyberspace is increasingly cause for concern.

More so, “It’s especially a problem given the ubiquitous nature of devices collecting data,” Erica Briscoe, a chief scientist in the ATAS Laboratory at Georgia Tech Research Institute

and one of the authors of the Big Data report, said in opening remarks. Schukai said that while “we’ve been in this amazing technology change over the last twenty years…

everything tech can do sits about ten to fifteen years beyond where law and policy sits.”

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