Transparency: Difference between revisions

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'''By disclosing uneditable transaction data from the inception of political or business organisations you can make it a lot more trustworthy.'''
'''By disclosing uneditable transaction data from the inception of political or business organisations you can make it a lot more trustworthy.'''


Imagine you were given a ring which makes you invisible much like Frodo in the Lord of the Rings. ''What would you do?'' Would you rob a bank or anonymously help a homeless person? Its argued by Plato that the majority of people would do bad<ref>Plato's Republic - Laird, A. (2001). "Ringing the Changes on Gyges: Philosophy and the Formation of Fiction in Plato's Republic". ''Journal of Hellenic Studies''. '''121''': 12–29. doi:10.2307/631825. JSTOR 631825.</ref>. i.e. he argues that this is because humans are primarily selfish in nature. ''However, what if we turn this thought experiment on its head?''   
Imagine you were given a ring which makes you invisible much like Frodo in the Lord of the Rings. ''What would you do?'' Would you anonymously rob a bank or help a homeless person? Its argued by Plato that the majority of people would rob the bank<ref>Plato's Republic - Laird, A. (2001). "Ringing the Changes on Gyges: Philosophy and the Formation of Fiction in Plato's Republic". ''Journal of Hellenic Studies''. '''121''': 12–29. doi:10.2307/631825. JSTOR 631825.</ref>, he argues that this is because humans are primarily selfish in nature. ''However, what if we turn this thought experiment on its head?''   


Imagine this time, instead of the ring hiding you from everyone, the ring shows everyone everything you do. ''Would you still get up to similar mischief?'' Or like what happens with CCTV, if you are watched or even just recorded the majority of people are unlikely to do wrong.  
Imagine this time, instead of the ring hiding you from everyone, the ring shows everyone everything you do. ''Would you still get up to similar mischief?'' Or like what happens with CCTV, if you are watched or even just recorded the majority of people are unlikely to do wrong.  

Revision as of 23:58, 29 August 2022

Transparency
Figure 1. The ring of Gyges - if you were to become invisible, what would you do?

By disclosing uneditable transaction data from the inception of political or business organisations you can make it a lot more trustworthy.

Imagine you were given a ring which makes you invisible much like Frodo in the Lord of the Rings. What would you do? Would you anonymously rob a bank or help a homeless person? Its argued by Plato that the majority of people would rob the bank[1], he argues that this is because humans are primarily selfish in nature. However, what if we turn this thought experiment on its head?

Imagine this time, instead of the ring hiding you from everyone, the ring shows everyone everything you do. Would you still get up to similar mischief? Or like what happens with CCTV, if you are watched or even just recorded the majority of people are unlikely to do wrong.

This is the principle of Radical Transparency and it should be the minimum we expect from someone in political office. If someone is given the privilege of public office, they should be required to disclose all transactions by default. In Australia this is done, to but only to an extent. Data is published by the AEC, for political transparency, but in a poor format, and there is a glaring loophole, dark money can funnel in if the donations are below $9,000. If a mining company, gambling company or optician company want to have their priorities represented all they need to do is make a shell company which donates several $8,999 donations.

To change this is extremely difficult, like the protection of tax havens, there are a bevy of highly funded lobbyist present when transparency laws are put through parliament. The only other way to do this is to lead by example. Transparency is the primary tenet of The Transparent Corporation.

References

  1. Plato's Republic - Laird, A. (2001). "Ringing the Changes on Gyges: Philosophy and the Formation of Fiction in Plato's Republic". Journal of Hellenic Studies. 121: 12–29. doi:10.2307/631825. JSTOR 631825.

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