The First Tedtalk about Tattoos, Greek tales, and immortality was very interesting in its comparison to how our digital footprint leaves an everlasting tattoo on our lives. As technology progresses, we find ourselves with less and less privacy, losing protections faster than we can gain them, if any protections in general. This was personally intriguing to me as well, as someone who loves mythological tales, the comparisons and warnings given even hundreds of years ago are being applied to our own modern-day form of immortality.
Military equipment is being used to surveil us, and they keep that data, and even weapons are being used against protestors, which is ironic given that we are paying for the very things used to surveil us. Police deliberately pass by specific locations to read license plates, using cell towers, tracking signals inside homes of the completely innocent is practically screaming surveillance state.
“Our telephones and the networks that carry our calls were wired for surveillance first and foremost.” Hackers, criminals, stalkers, and foreign intelligence who can tap into those networks are easily capable of listening. Countries like China have already hacked into easily wiretapped services like Google to monitor individuals, and Greece’s largest telephone company has been hacked to spy on high political figures like the prime minister and the cabinet. The Backdoor is built into our everyday services, which can be used by the government or by any nefarious individuals. Having secure communications on a wide scale is far better than having no privacy at all.
In 2025, the TAKE IT DOWN act was passed, a bill that criminalizes the nonconsensual publication of intimate images, including "digital forgeries”. In 2025, this bill was passed. I’ve personally heard horror stories of girls in school having AI used nonconsensually to plaster their faces in explicit photos. The fact that we only just passed a modicum of protection in this regard is telling for how our Congress is keeping up in the digital age. Revenge porn is as common as 1 in 10 women over 30, with only minor repercussions against this exploitation.