i've used the following metaphor in previous situations, and find it fits again. years ago there was a tv program called: the outer limits. in one episode titled: to serve man, inhabitants of earth were visited by aliens who brought a book called: to serve man, and took earthlings on their ships to their planet. one earthling decided to translate the book and discovered as some of the last were leaving for that planet that the book was a cookbook. humans run to the things they believe are good for them without sufficient review of the possibilities and now we're running towards what the following article will show you;
A FRIEND OF mine, who runs a large television production company
in the car-mad city of Los Angeles, recently noticed that his intern, an
aspiring filmmaker from the People’s Republic of China, was walking to
work.
WHEN HE OFFERED to arrange a swifter mode of transportation, she
declined. When he asked why, she explained that she “needed the steps”
on her Fitbit to sign in to her social media accounts. If she fell below the right number of steps, it would lower her health and fitness rating, which is part of her social rating, which is monitored by the government. A low social rating could prevent her from working or traveling abroad.
China’s social rating system, which was announced by the ruling Communist Party in 2014, will soon be a fact of life for many more Chinese.
By 2020, if the Party’s plan holds, every footstep, keystroke, like, dislike, social media contact, and posting tracked by the state will affect one’s social rating.
Personal “creditworthiness” or “trustworthiness” points will be used to reward and punish individuals and
companies by granting or denying them access to public services like
health care, travel, and employment, according to a plan released last
year by the municipal government of Beijing. High-scoring individuals
will find themselves in a “green channel,” where they can more easily
access social opportunities, while those who take actions that are
disapproved of by the state will be “unable to move a step.”
Big Brother is an emerging reality in China.
Yet in the West, at least, the threat of government surveillance systems
being integrated with the existing corporate surveillance capacities of
big-data companies like Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Amazon into
one gigantic all-seeing eye appears to trouble very few people—even as
countries like Venezuela have been quick to copy the Chinese model.
Still, it can’t happen here, right? We are
iPhone owners and Amazon Prime members, not vassals of a one-party
state. We are canny consumers who know that Facebook is tracking our
interactions and Google is selling us stuff.
Yet it seems to me there is little reason to imagine that the people
who run large technology companies have any vested interest in allowing
pre-digital folkways to interfere with their 21st-century engineering
and business models,
any more than 19th-century robber barons showed any particular regard
for laws or people that got in the way of their railroads and steel
trusts.
Nor is there much reason to imagine that the technologists who run
our giant consumer-data monopolies have any better idea of the future
they're building than the rest of us do.
Facebook, Google, and other big-data monopolists already
hoover up behavioral markers and cues on a scale and with a frequency
that few of us understand. They then analyze, package, and sell that data to their partners...........https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-01-24/big-tech-merging-big-brother-big-problem
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