Roland Perry on 09 October 2004 at 11:56 said:-
> ie use of Jargon. But in this instance there was no such intention on
> the part of the speakers. They were simply caught on the hop by a
> penetrating piece of cross-examination. While they might have
> been happy
> (or, as it seemed at the time, rather uncomfortable) for this lapse to
> be evident to the people in the room,
Whilst I have not watched the webcam recording to which you refer:-
That is the purpose of cross examination, creating a situation causing
certain responses to occur, a skill promoted within some professions, and
generally very intellectually logical in its progression.
Generating a given outcome to a situation can itself create a perception of
situations which may meet the audiences needs. In those situations relevance
to actuality can become managed. Accurately collating the different
perceptions of any actuality to derive a clear view is surely necessary if
causes rather than symptoms are to be recognised; Especially if any given
amusement is to be correctly located.
Automated symptomatic responses to current problems (Like public area CCTV)
themselves can create rather than degrade problems for the future, but I
guess that emanates from living in the present technological society.
> having it preserved for the
> public/posterity is a different matter. Unless you are fully aware
> that's happening and take it on the chin as part of the job.
Preservation moves the issue into the realms of the 5th principle.
The outcome of principle 5 considerations must be dependent on purpose and
importance to the relevant audiences; Each of which may apply a different
value to elements of the material. And that is before historical interest
for audiences of the future is considered.
Ian W
> -----Original Message-----
> From: This list is for those interested in Data Protection
> issues [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
> Roland Perry
> Sent: 09 October 2004 11:56
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Webcasts
>
>
> In message <004301c4ade8$5184c490$7f3468d5@ntlworld>, at 11:11:12 on
> Sat, 9 Oct 2004, Ian Welton <[log in to unmask]> writes
> >Choosing the fashion of communication to appropriately suite
> the audience(s)
> >is definitely one of the historically developed (and ongoing) privacy
> >creating mechanisms,
>
> ie use of Jargon. But in this instance there was no such intention on
> the part of the speakers. They were simply caught on the hop by a
> penetrating piece of cross-examination. While they might have
> been happy
> (or, as it seemed at the time, rather uncomfortable) for this lapse to
> be evident to the people in the room, having it preserved for the
> public/posterity is a different matter. Unless you are fully aware
> that's happening and take it on the chin as part of the job.
> --
> Roland Perry
>
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