I think most of us are
aware of the tremendous impact the digital age has had on our daily lives. The
digital technology and sharing of data has brought us many benefits. Things
that were once considered impossible now have become routine. We can reach family
members and friends immediately by calling them on their mobile phone. We can
capture and share high-resolution images in an instant. The experiences of
family and friends are available in real time through video, and we have access
to an incredible inventory of movies, sports programs, and documentaries.
However, with any
technological advance, negative aspects can surface. We now find our lives are
intruded upon more than ever before. Cloud data storage sites contain details
of our lives that limit our privacy and anonymity. Every time we provide
details of our lives such as our age, address, telephone number, interests,
hobbies, vacation spots, purchases, likes, dislikes, favorite books, pictures,
friends, etc. we add to the digital profiles that define us. If we post our
activities and locations during the course of the day on Facebook, we have now
provided real-time details about our lives. As computers become faster and ever
more sophisticated, I envision a time when someone will be selling our life
stories to advertisers and perhaps others as well. They will provide a level of
detail that even our family members and closest friends don’t know.
At some point, we will
discover that there are absolutely no secrets because what we have said and
done has been recorded by someone and is now part of that digital profile.
Conversations can be overheard and recorded from a distance, and videos of
things we did that we would rather forget may have been captured by someone
without our knowledge. And recordings of our telephone calls, as well as all
searches we have ever done on a computer, are now in digital form and could potentially
become part of our profiles. My understanding is that Google has retained every
search we have ever done. They are legal safeguards for certain information,
but this has never stopped the unscrupulous.
Greater London has an
estimated 500,000 CCTV surveillance cameras. I doubt that we can go anywhere
without being captured on camera multiple times. We may think we have anonymity
in a large city like London, but with image recognition software and ever-faster
computers, it would be possible for someone to submit a query that shows all of
our outside activity during a specified period. And, of course, stores, gas
stations, banks, restaurants, and others have private surveillance cameras as
well, which may not be included in the half a million number.
Recently, we have all
become aware of fake news. This problem points out a serious issue with the
Internet and some of the large social networking companies. The development of
the Internet has given us an incredible sense of freedom. People who didn’t
have a voice before can now easily make themselves heard. They can enter chat
rooms, post to sites, and create their own blogs and express their views. They
can also create news that isn’t real news. Democracy and an open Internet give
us freedom to express ourselves like never before, but not all expression is
constructive. Some is misleading or downright dangerous. We value free speech
in this country, but we do not accept someone yelling fire in a crowded auditorium
or theater just to cause a panic. Yet, that is what we are seeing today on the
Internet. People are doing posts to confuse and scare the viewers.
I think an important
question is the following: Who is the editor or controller of what goes onto
that high-speed highway. We value news publications that have a good editorial
staff that require all stories meet a certain minimal standard in journalism.
The sources are checked for accuracy and the story must be relevant and
unbiased. There is no such editor for the Internet. Even individual companies who
provide Internet services are struggling to filter out fake news and
threatening or otherwise dangerous posts. The Internet is like a giant printing
press where anything can be produced; some make better use of it than others
do, but monitoring all of the digital content in real time on the Internet is
just not possible.
So where does this
leave us? I think we have to decide for ourselves on what is acceptable. How
much of our lives do we want exposed? Once we provide information in digital
form, there is no guarantee we can ever erase it. We can have a nude or embarrassing
picture posted on a website without our permission taken down, but most likely
copies are already on numerous servers and computers that we could never
locate.
We need to be critical
of anything we read from the Internet. What is the source? Is it a trusted
publication and are we certain it is actually their website? Who is the author?
What is their background? Anyone can claim anything. But what is the research
that backs up the claim? Are they just expressing an opinion or are they stating
something as fact?
With freedom comes
responsibility, and now more than ever before that responsibility falls upon us
as individuals. Most of the sites we visit cannot assure us that the material
posted has been carefully reviewed for accuracy and bias. That responsibility
is now left to us. I fear that technology has run far ahead of humans’ ability
to control and manage it. John Von Neumann was perhaps the greatest mind of the
20th century. He is quoted as saying "the ever accelerating
progress of technology ... gives the appearance of approaching some essential
singularity in the history of the race beyond which human affairs, as we know
them, could not continue.” We may be fast approaching that singularity. Some
think it will occur within the next twenty to thirty years.
Once the secret to the
atom was unlocked, there was no going back. It was up to humans to control and
manage an incredible new type of energy. Unfortunately, I think humankind has
not been up to the task. Now, we face the very real prospect of sophisticated artificial
intelligence. The technology is evolving faster than our ability to control it
for the benefit of all. We may soon reach a singularity where everything is
undone and there is no going back. And we may not like the new state of human
affairs.
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