Privacy in the Information Age
Catherine Price took extraordinary steps to live anonymously for a week without becoming a hermit. It was, she found, impossible.
The degree to which modern technological conveniences make it possible to track our every move is often talked about but probably nonetheless underestimated. But the idea of a golden age of privacy lost is almost certainly a myth. While there was no Amazon or Google or OnStar or Tivo or Visa to track our every financial transaction until recently, we’re actually much more anonymous in many ways than our parents’ generation. It’s actually rare nowadays for me to walk into a store and encounter anyone that I actually know or who knows me; that wasn’t the case in the age of mom and pop retail.
via Andrew Sullivan
- Amazon Sues Over Internet Taxes
- Hitchens Calls Sully ‘Lesbian’
- Google to Store Patient Health Records
- Life Without Google
- OTB Latenight - Kate Bush
- Gas Stations Charging More for Credit Card Users?
- Hawaii Caucus First Next Time?
- Catholic Clinton Critics
- Fallacy of Mass Appeal
- Movies Getting Longer (But Just Barely)
- Romney Changes Mind on Auto Bailout
- Bleg: Comments
- Stevens Loses Re-Election Bid
- OTB Latenight - The Who
- McKiernan: ‘Glass Half Full’ in Afghanistan
- Should Obama Hunt Osama?
- And Let That Be a Lesson to You
- Focus on Family Cutting Jobs
- Will Blogs Kill Political Magazines?
- More on the Threat of Piracy to the Oil Trade
Sad but true, though in small town America, you can still encounter remnants of this. Even though we think we can walk down an unfamiliar street to escape from the tedium of everyday life, if even for a moment, we're naive to think so. With video cameras all over city streets, surely someone is watching us, and someone knows who we are.
Comments are Closed










