{"title":"经济间谍的伦理","authors":"Ross W. Bellaby","doi":"10.1017/S0892679423000138","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract The ethical value of intelligence lies in its crucial role in safeguarding individuals from harm by detecting, locating, and preventing threats. As part of this undertaking, intelligence can include protecting the economic well-being of the political community and its people. Intelligence, however, also entails causing people harm when it violates their vital interests through its operations. The challenge, therefore, is how to reconcile this tension, which Cécile Fabre's recent book Spying through a Glass Darkly does by arguing for the “ongoing and preemptive imposition of defensive harm.” Fabre applies this underlying argument to the specifics of economic espionage to argue that while states, businesses, and individuals do have a general right over their information that prevents others from accessing it, such protections can be forfeited or overridden when there is a potential threat to the fundamental rights of third parties. This essay argues, however, that Fabre's discussion on economic espionage overlooks important additional proportionality and discrimination concerns that need to be accounted for. In addition to the privacy violations it causes, economic espionage can cause harms to people's other vital interests, including their physical and mental well-being and autonomy. Given the complex way in which the economy interlinks with people's lives and society, harms to one economic actor will have repercussions on those secondary economic entities dependent on them, such as workers, buyers, and investors. This, in turn, can produce further harms on other economic actors, causing damages to ripple outward across society.","PeriodicalId":11772,"journal":{"name":"Ethics & International Affairs","volume":"28 1","pages":"116 - 133"},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Ethics of Economic Espionage\",\"authors\":\"Ross W. Bellaby\",\"doi\":\"10.1017/S0892679423000138\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Abstract The ethical value of intelligence lies in its crucial role in safeguarding individuals from harm by detecting, locating, and preventing threats. As part of this undertaking, intelligence can include protecting the economic well-being of the political community and its people. Intelligence, however, also entails causing people harm when it violates their vital interests through its operations. The challenge, therefore, is how to reconcile this tension, which Cécile Fabre's recent book Spying through a Glass Darkly does by arguing for the “ongoing and preemptive imposition of defensive harm.” Fabre applies this underlying argument to the specifics of economic espionage to argue that while states, businesses, and individuals do have a general right over their information that prevents others from accessing it, such protections can be forfeited or overridden when there is a potential threat to the fundamental rights of third parties. This essay argues, however, that Fabre's discussion on economic espionage overlooks important additional proportionality and discrimination concerns that need to be accounted for. In addition to the privacy violations it causes, economic espionage can cause harms to people's other vital interests, including their physical and mental well-being and autonomy. Given the complex way in which the economy interlinks with people's lives and society, harms to one economic actor will have repercussions on those secondary economic entities dependent on them, such as workers, buyers, and investors. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
情报的伦理价值在于它通过发现、定位和预防威胁来保护个人免受伤害。作为这项工作的一部分,情报工作可以包括保护政治团体及其人民的经济福祉。然而,当情报活动侵犯了人们的切身利益时,它也会给人们带来伤害。因此,我们面临的挑战是如何调和这种紧张关系。法布尔最近出版的《透过黑暗的玻璃进行监视》(espionage through a Glass Darkly)主张“持续和先发制人地实施防御性伤害”。法布尔将这一基本论点应用于经济间谍活动的具体情况,他认为,尽管国家、企业和个人确实对自己的信息拥有一般权利,阻止他人获取这些信息,但当第三方的基本权利受到潜在威胁时,这种保护可以被剥夺或推翻。然而,本文认为,法布尔对经济间谍活动的讨论忽略了需要考虑的重要的额外比例性和歧视问题。除了侵犯隐私之外,经济间谍活动还会损害人们的其他切身利益,包括他们的身心健康和自主权。鉴于经济与人们的生活和社会相互联系的复杂方式,对一个经济参与者的伤害将对依赖于他们的次要经济实体产生影响,如工人、买家和投资者。这反过来又会对其他经济参与者造成进一步的伤害,导致损害向外波及整个社会。
Abstract The ethical value of intelligence lies in its crucial role in safeguarding individuals from harm by detecting, locating, and preventing threats. As part of this undertaking, intelligence can include protecting the economic well-being of the political community and its people. Intelligence, however, also entails causing people harm when it violates their vital interests through its operations. The challenge, therefore, is how to reconcile this tension, which Cécile Fabre's recent book Spying through a Glass Darkly does by arguing for the “ongoing and preemptive imposition of defensive harm.” Fabre applies this underlying argument to the specifics of economic espionage to argue that while states, businesses, and individuals do have a general right over their information that prevents others from accessing it, such protections can be forfeited or overridden when there is a potential threat to the fundamental rights of third parties. This essay argues, however, that Fabre's discussion on economic espionage overlooks important additional proportionality and discrimination concerns that need to be accounted for. In addition to the privacy violations it causes, economic espionage can cause harms to people's other vital interests, including their physical and mental well-being and autonomy. Given the complex way in which the economy interlinks with people's lives and society, harms to one economic actor will have repercussions on those secondary economic entities dependent on them, such as workers, buyers, and investors. This, in turn, can produce further harms on other economic actors, causing damages to ripple outward across society.