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Adam D. Moore, author of ''Privacy Rights: Moral and Legal Foundations'', argued, "it is the view that rights are resistant to cost/benefit or consequentialist sort of arguments. Here we are rejecting the view that privacy interests are the sorts of things that can be traded for security."<ref name="Moorep204">Moore, p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=AEn0J0Drx9MC&dq=%22tHE+DISTribution+aspect+is+highlighted+when+surveillance+targets%22&pg=PA204 204].</ref> He also stated that surveillance can disproportionately affect certain groups in society based on appearance, ethnicity, sexuality, and religion.
 
[[Bruce Schneier]], a computer security expert and cryptographer, expressed opposition, citing a statement widely attributed to [[Cardinal Richelieu]]'s<ref>{{cite statementweb |title=Cardinal Richelieu - Wikiquote |url=https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Cardinal_Richelieu#Disputed |website=en.wikiquote.org |language=en |date=2023-05-31}}</ref>, "Give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest man, I'll find enough to hang him," referring to how a state government can find aspects in a person's life in order to prosecute or [[blackmail]] that individual.<ref name="SchneierEternal">[[Bruce Schneier|Schneier, Bruce]]. "[https://www.schneier.com/essay-114.html The Eternal Value of Privacy]." ''[https://www.schneier.com/ Schneier on Security].'' May 18, 2006. Retrieved on May 13, 2017.</ref> Schneier also argued that the actual choice is between "liberty versus control" instead of "security versus privacy".<ref name="SchneierEternal" />
 
[[Harvey A. Silverglate]] estimated that the common person, on average, unknowingly commits three felonies a day in the US.<ref>{{cite book|title=Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent|date=2011|publisher=Encounter Books|isbn=9781594032554}}</ref>
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