The point is to gather some thoughts about privacy, surveillance, conformity, and so on. But also that corporations have access to all this data, but the public does not. Maybe an event like this would accelerate a demand for open access to all data about their neighbors, living in a truly transparent society... eventually becoming a collective consciousness... or maybe people would realize that privacy is an important , and so on. I thought architects might be thinking about these issues, and if you don't think it's important maybe say why
won and done williams
Nov 29, 17 9:37 am
I live in fear of this everyday.
JLC-1
Nov 29, 17 11:34 am
fame
Peter Normand
Nov 29, 17 1:32 pm
The concern is not when the data is available for agents of unscrupulous actors, it already is, but when the vast amounts of data become easily searchable and verifiable. Assume everything you do online, every purchase you make online or with a card is going to be tractable and can be read and misread by others. The only way to have privacy is to not fully participate in society.
Over and OUT
Peter N
curtkram
Nov 29, 17 1:51 pm
about two years ago.
when we get to the point where i actually know what my credit card company knows about me, is that good or bad
are we mad when government does this but not mad when the people who paid for government does it, because liberty?
archietechie
Nov 30, 17 4:20 am
I'd defer the topic to Snowden but a shame he's gone.
Wilma Buttfit
Dec 2, 17 10:51 pm
Conclusion: people don't care or think about you as much as you might want them to, and if they do, be flattered.
MiniSharma123
Apr 13, 18 2:10 am
Maybe an event like this would accelerate a demand for open access to all data about their neighbors, living in a truly transparent society.may be use the Google Maps Scraper
2018? 2019? 2020?
Nobody cares, oh and get a life :)
Why?
The point is to gather some thoughts about privacy, surveillance, conformity, and so on. But also that corporations have access to all this data, but the public does not. Maybe an event like this would accelerate a demand for open access to all data about their neighbors, living in a truly transparent society... eventually becoming a collective consciousness... or maybe people would realize that privacy is an important , and so on. I thought architects might be thinking about these issues, and if you don't think it's important maybe say why
I live in fear of this everyday.
fame
The concern is not when the data is available for agents of unscrupulous actors, it already is, but when the vast amounts of data become easily searchable and verifiable. Assume everything you do online, every purchase you make online or with a card is going to be tractable and can be read and misread by others. The only way to have privacy is to not fully participate in society.
Over and OUT
Peter N
about two years ago.
when we get to the point where i actually know what my credit card company knows about me, is that good or bad
are we mad when government does this but not mad when the people who paid for government does it, because liberty?
I'd defer the topic to Snowden but a shame he's gone.
Conclusion: people don't care or think about you as much as you might want them to, and if they do, be flattered.
Maybe an event like this would accelerate a demand for open access to all data about their neighbors, living in a truly transparent society.may be use the Google Maps Scraper