Frankly, it might be what we need to finally get a privacy amendment. It's not legal in Japan to have cameras that take pictures without making a noise because of upskirting; I can easily see all HUDs requiring a tally light whenever they are recording or storing information. Makes me want to post The Moon Moth if I can find it. Apropos of nothing - I had one of the first two smartphones. I'm all about access to data. But the only time I can see wanting Google Glass is when I'm on the motorcycle. I've got hands for a reason, dammit.
I'm thinking the opposite: this is exactly what need to finally get the world's populace to understand that "public" is the exact opposite of "private". I don't know when people began to think it is somehow reasonable, to expect privacy in public, but it is a recent thing, nonsensical on its face, and an entitled desire. When you're in public, you're in public. You will be seen. And the "threat" of being seen and recorded, covertly or otherwise, is almost as old as I am. If this is what it takes to finally, finally hammer these facts into everyone's heads... well, OK. Maybe we will all, at long last, start to act accordingly, and drop the frivolous lawsuits and faux-astonishment/outrage when we see pictures of ourselves in public places being posted online.Frankly, it might be what we need to finally get a privacy amendment
You say this as if it mostly isn't already the case. The only part I find annoying is people pretending otherwise. If a GIS or TinEye for "kleinbl00" doesn't already turn up an image of you or some info, I'd wager its because you put forth an effort to make sure this was so, not because the default is "anonymity". (And no, I haven't checked. ;-))It's the fact that any picture taken of you anywhere ever can be found by looking for your name
And that's a good thing? This is new in the history of mankind and the fact that it ooks people out is not only to be expected, it's to be supported. Further, you seem to be arguing that the onus is on the individual to keep nefarious forces from destroying their anonymity, rather than on law to protect its citizens. Which I find dangerously wrong-headed.
Not good, not bad. I think it can be either, depending on who we ask and why. IMO, this is as old as when newspapers started using photographs. If anything has changed, its the degree, and IMO even that hasn't changed overmuch for the last decade or so. I do not see why, on either front. I would feel differently if we were talking about the inside of my windowless bathroom, or even inside of my house with the curtains drawn, or even the inside of my house with the curtains UP (though I wouldn't argue that very strongly), or even other such places where I can reasonably expect to do things without being seen... but we aren't talking about that. No, we're talking about places where you can be seen by strangers, potentially a ton of them. It has long been a simple, axiomatic truth, that if you can be seen, you can be recorded, and if you can be recorded, you can (and probably will, at some point) end up on the internet. That this device -- which only makes all this incrementally easier, and is literally as plain as the nose on my face -- can cause this kind of "OMG Wat??" reaction... well, its just mysterious to me, and somewhat silly. This is perhaps too fine a distinction, but: no, I'm not. What I'm arguing is that in public, there really isn't anonymity to destroy, and I've no idea why people think there is. I literally do not understand the mind of someone who is upset that a photo of them riding the bus was posted to a public FB profile, just to pick an example. The best I can guess is that people just don't like that this is the case, and I really just do not know what to say to that other than "avoid the outside". Or, better yet, what I said before: act accordingly.And that's a good thing?
This is new in the history of mankind
the fact that it ooks people out is not only to be expected, it's to be supported.
Further, you seem to be arguing that the onus is on the individual to keep nefarious forces from destroying their anonymity