We all know that Google stores huge amounts of information about everyone who uses its search tools, that Amazon can recommend new books to us based on our past purchases, and that many governments have engaged in many data-mining activities to acquire information about us, including involving telecommunications companies in monitoring our phone calls. Control over access to private information is raising new challenges for those anxious to protect our privacy. In Privacy Rights, the professor of the University of Washington, Adam Moore, adds informational privacy to physical and spatial privacy as fundamental to developing a general theory of privacy that is well grounded morally and legally. The author provides a set of tools, in the form of principles, arguments, and examples, to help us rigorously put current intuitions about privacy to the test. This volume is a significant contribution to the literature because it links the theory of privacy defended with other established views in the literature, but goes beyond that and adds new arguments and justifications.