[Avodah] Privacy in Halakhah
Micha Berger
micha at aishdas.org
Wed Feb 6 08:28:30 PST 2019
Aviad haKohein and Gavi Siboni wrote an article in last December's
issue of Cyber, Intelligence, and Security titled "Ubiquitous Presence:
Protecting Privacy and Forbidding Intrusion into a Persons Records in
Jewish Law".
Mosaic Magazine's snippet
The ban on infringing upon a person's privacy is specifically mentioned
in Jewish law in many contexts.... For example, the Mishnah states, "A
person must not create an opening [in his own house] opposite an opening
[in his neighbor's], or a window opposite a window. If his opening or
window is small, he must not make it larger. If there is one opening, he
must not turn it into two openings."... In his commentary on the Talmud,
Rabbi Shmuel ben Meir explains that the ban on creating a new opening
opposite the opening to his neighbor's yard (or even a yard shared by
both of them) is designed to prevent damage caused by looking into another
person's property; that is, infringement on another person's privacy.
[The contemporary scholar] Eliyahu Lifshitz explains that the Mishnah
shows that damage to privacy caused by opening a window opposite a
shared yard is relative and not absolute damage. For this reason, there
is no requirement to conceal an existing window, even a large one; it is
merely forbidden to create a new window or enlarge an existing one. If
the window existed even before the neighbors moved in, they cannot force
the window-owner to change his situation; rather, they must take their
own measures to prevent the infringement of their privacy....
Jewish law took a more significant step in protecting a person's privacy
regarding personal documents--such as medical records, letters, and,
nowadays, material stored on a personal computer--based on a ruling by
Rabbi Gershom ben Judah, the greatest Jewish sage in Germany in the 10th
century. Among other things, he enacted a ban against any person who
reads someone else's letters without permission, since doing so invades
the letter-writer's privacy....
The general prohibition against infringing upon privacy as well as
the specific prohibition against accessing another's records without
that person's explicit consent are therefore deeply rooted in Jewish
law. Accelerated technological development, the weaknesses of cyberspace,
and difficulties in security pose new and exciting challenges to Jewish
law concerning the application of ancient principles to our times--pouring
the fine old wine of Jewish law into the new container of the legal
system in Israel, whose values are both Jewish and democratic.
RGS posted a link to the Mosaic piece on Torah Musings' Daily Reyd with
the comment:
"Deeply rooted"? I'm not convinced -- Finding a Right to Privacy
in Halakhah
This topic was recently discussed by R Yonatan Ziring in his shiur
series for Gush's VBM Halakha in the Age of Social Media:
#13: Confidentiality in the Age of Social Media Part 1
What does privacy mean in the modern online world? Is revealing
secrets a biblical violation, a rabbinic ban or simply bad
manners?
https://etzion.org.il/en/shiur-13-confidentiality-age-social-media-part-1
#14 Confidentiality in the Age of Social Media 2: Public Information
https://etzion.org.il/en/shiur-14-confidentiality-age-social-media-2-public-information
#15: Confidentiality in the Age of Social Media 3: Public Information --
Applications
https://etzion.org.il/en/shiur-15-confidentiality-age-social-media-3-public-information-%E2%80%94-applications
I can think of two meqoros for the concept of privacy:
1- Hezeq re'iyah -- I'm allowed to protect existing privacy in my yard or
who can see in my windows.
2- Lishna Bisha -- according to the Rambam, the Aramaic translation
of lashon hara means the same as the idiom LH. But most describe it
as a right for private information to remain private. (See RJZ's
shiurim.)
Tir'u baTov!
-Micha
--
Micha Berger The meaning of life is to find your gift.
micha at aishdas.org The purpose of life
http://www.aishdas.org is to give it away.
Fax: (270) 514-1507 - Pablo Picasso
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