Isn’t it amazing how much of the old Star Trek series, with
Captain Kirk, Bones, Scottie and Spock, has come true? Remember the walkie talkies
that look so much like our modern flip phones? What about Capt. Kirk asking, ‘Computer,
give me any information on XYZ?’ We’ve come a long way. Now we can answer most
any question by typing it in on our computers, an almost infinite amount of
information is at our fingertips. Voice-activated ‘assistants’ are remarkably
like the ‘computer’ Captain Kirk used. And this has happened in the last
fifteen years.
But here’s the thing. When Capt. Kirk asked ‘computer’ for
information, or commanded ‘her’ (she spoke with a female voice, even back then)
all of his interactions were private. No one could know what he had asked her unless
they were in the room with him when he said it. Now just suppose that Kirk had
been going about his business, asking Computer every now and then a few
questions about various items he might be curious about. But without him
realizing it, Computer had also been logging all of his other interactions with
devices aboard the Starship Enterprise, had tracked his every move, whom he
spoke with, for how long, and what was said. Which is all a distinct
possibility. But what if, unbeknownst to anyone aboard the Enterprise, not even
Spock, the Klingons had gained access to this information? While Computer may
not have named the personnel aboard ship, using anonymous ‘numbers’ associated
with each person, it wouldn’t take long to figure out who was who.
That is exactly what is happening today with our reliance on
apps created by Facebook and Google, among others. If you have an app active on
your phone, it has access to everywhere you go, how long you stay there, if you
post updates to Facebook, who was with you, what they were doing. And behind
the scenes, all of that information is being sold to the Klingons, or to anyone
else who has the money to pay for it, including governments, corporations,
anyone who cares to ask and can pay the money to get it.
Maybe you live your life in such a way that you are happy
with it being a complete open book to anyone who cares to look. Societies who
have operated in such a manner have opened themselves up to the worst kind of
manipulation by those who can and will take that information and use it against
you. Think of the Stasi, or North Korea. It is the beginning of a power that
has such complete control you no longer have any freedom at all. If you are
constantly under surveillance, which is the case with most of us who use modern
technology, you are no longer free. You are being watched, listened to, tracked
and recorded, not just the things you post, but anything and everything the
phone is capable of noticing, which is a lot. You often hear that our modern
day smart phones have more computing power than the computers that sent men to
the moon. That’s a lot of knowledge. Remember, without privacy, there can be no
freedom.