Comment on Flock Safety's solar-powered cameras could make surveillance more widespread | TechCrunch
cAUzapNEAGLb@lemmy.world 5 months ago
The crazed goal to turn all of America into a high security prison.
No need to ask questions that a person could invoke their rights on when you can pay our capital overloads our own tax money for records instead.
What websites, what locations, what friends, what we buy, and everything else you could care to ask.
Soon we’ll have sensors installed on our toilets to make sure anyone with a dollar can know what we eat and what medicines we take and how regular we are.
Land of the free
ThePyroPython@lemmy.world 5 months ago
So just like the UK then? We’ve got more CCTV cameras per 100,000 people than China.
cAUzapNEAGLb@lemmy.world 5 months ago
In a way, yes.
Historically, the US fought a war to not be the UK. There was an earnest attempt to enshrine freedoms to privacy and thought from the beginning of this governments creation. With the ability to enforce free thoughts through explicitly allowing speech and weapons, along with the ability to reject search and intrusion from the state (outside of due process)
I think it’s important for people to be able to be private and to have secrets. People act differently when there’s trust that they are not observed and will not be observed.
I think it’s cruel to confine the human experience to only being in the “observed” state of mind.
Being able to secretly meet people, and go places without others knowing, and have private conversations, and to own and make things secretly is important to me. They don’t have to be nefarious or even embarrassing, a person on principle can just want something to be private, rational or not that should be allowed by default.
If I went on a hike alone to clear my mind, and then stumbled into a tracking camera on the trail, my mood would be changed. I would feel compelled to play a performative role and manage my appearance and actions and regulate what I say and do in a way that I wasn’t before that feeling of privacy was broken. Even more so if I knew that camera was live reporting with ai identification and analysis to the government.
This privacy is already barely existing anymore, I feel compelled to oppose any new invasion of privacy and to make attempts to carve out new privacy where I can.