Wrapping up our special editorial theme for June 2016, Privacy, Archinect writers Julia Ingalls and Nicholas Korody join us on the podcast this week to discuss two of their recent features—Julia's piece on banking security with input from a reformed robber, and Nicholas' interview with the architecture firm that moonlights as a government whistleblower, posting hundreds of secret documents online.
Listen to episode 71 of Archinect Sessions, "Private Session":
Shownotes:
Nextdoor, "the private social network for your neighborhood"
1 Comment
after the listen I naturally concluded (or question) between Julia's comment on virtual and real violence and Ken's comments on the neighborhood Nevada van story - is the internet a good gauge for the latent real feelings of individuals or does real human interaction quickly suppress what appears the be the natural tendency in the minds of most people towards hate out of fear; but then Paul's gay community point may or may not contradict this thought.
all this only further predicts the future of increasing mass shooters (i would predict). The crossover from unchecked paranoia cultivated and spawned by the virtual world that goes unchecked by lack of human interaction.
I'm sure architecture and urban planning could solve part of this somehow - causing human interaction.
good pocast
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