In the current age of technology, privacy is hard to come by. With just one quick search it is easy to find social media pages, posts, and much more information about specific people. This new technology is taking privacy out of the hands of the majority of people. After watching four interesting TED talks about the current age of privacy I found two of the TED talk very eye opening. I found that from pictures of your license plates, to facial recognition and online tattoos, it is nearly impossible to escape the grip of being tracked.
In the TED talk done by Juan Enriquez he compared our now permanent online presence to a tattoo. From our search history, what we look at, pictures we click, and more, this record is basically permanent just like a tattoo. It helps the internet tailor what we see, the government tracks what we do, when we do it, and how we get things done. He also brought up an interesting point about how this online "tattoo" threatens us with immortality rather than the older generation's threat of mortality. Instead of threatening us with death, it uses our permanent online presence against us on an un-deletable and immortal record. Not only are we threatened with online immorality, we are also threatened with being tracked constantly.
In another TED talk done by Catherine Crump she talks about the ways in which new technology not only tracks criminals and illegal activities, but they also keep records and track innocent civilians. They track them using facial recognition, license plate pictures, and more. This tracking is warranted to be done as a consequence for unlawful actions, but it should not be warranted on law abiding citizens and families. In her TED talk she proposes a solution to this growing issue that I agree with. She suggests that we pass laws in government requiring police to dispose of the data on innocent civilians, while utilizing the data and technology for legitimate causes, such as helping to catch criminals so that our systems can grow stronger while also growing more trustworthy at the same time.
These issues pose a huge threat to my privacy as well as yours. Everything posted on social media, searched online, and tracked by you are on record. Things you write and post for your friends and family, including your location, are at the fingertips of the government which is a massive crisis of privacy. To protect ourselves from this issue it is important to speak up to city and town councils to bring up the chain of the government. It is important to have our data, and the data of innocent citizens is disposed off to protect, not only our privacy, but our reputation in total.