Tricky
Briefly immortal
Look at what we're seeing in Iran. It is a very repressive country, yet people on the street with nothing more than a cell phone can change the course of events by recording the government atrocities. They can mail them via satellite to news stations. Look at the Rodney King affair. Riots occurred across large parts of the state because some amateur videographer caught a brutal beating by the police. Look at Mark Sanford, caught because one of his mistress's former lovers had her e-mail tracked.
Is there anything that is unavailable to public scrutiny these days? Yes, probably so, but as time passes, it will become less and less. Video cameras are so cheap and so compact and recording space is so plentiful that if you wanted to, you could record almost every minute of your lives. Suppose (and I got this idea from David Brin) that you affixed a tiny camera to your glasses and had it feed a continuous recording device? Suppose everybody did something like that? Could our current technology handle it? Maybe not, but we're not far away.
So what happens when everything is recorded? Will it mean an end to most crime? Will it mean an end to privacy? And most importantly, will this be good for society or bad? Certainly we can't argue that reducing crime is good. But at what cost? Is it worth it? Can we learn to live in a truly open society where nobody has secrets that can't be discovered by a determined hacker?
It is indeed a brave new world, but not the kind Huxley envisioned. It is one where all information is available. How will we handle it?
Is there anything that is unavailable to public scrutiny these days? Yes, probably so, but as time passes, it will become less and less. Video cameras are so cheap and so compact and recording space is so plentiful that if you wanted to, you could record almost every minute of your lives. Suppose (and I got this idea from David Brin) that you affixed a tiny camera to your glasses and had it feed a continuous recording device? Suppose everybody did something like that? Could our current technology handle it? Maybe not, but we're not far away.
So what happens when everything is recorded? Will it mean an end to most crime? Will it mean an end to privacy? And most importantly, will this be good for society or bad? Certainly we can't argue that reducing crime is good. But at what cost? Is it worth it? Can we learn to live in a truly open society where nobody has secrets that can't be discovered by a determined hacker?
It is indeed a brave new world, but not the kind Huxley envisioned. It is one where all information is available. How will we handle it?