I do think this is a commonly misunderstood and mischievously discussed subject. I think even in the most utopian models of social organisation privacy is a fundamental prerequisite. The merits and failings of surveillance marketing as termed here are a related but separate and different matter. I would argue that privacy is a fundamental of the human condition and of human decency. A simple example of this is toilets and bathrooms. We are not doing anything wrong when we go to use a toilet but it is not an activity that would benefit from mass transparency or one we wish to share with all. By this we can see that privacy is a fundamental of human decency. Clothes again are similar. My wearing clothes does not mean I have something to hide it is simply a way for me to keep what is private to me just that. To propose a society where privacy is no longer needed would mean that we would essentially have to redefine the human condition in a fundamental way from our understanding of what it is now. And to what end? To serve what benefit one would have to ask. I know this is a somewhat base metaphor but I think it's important to look at this matter from such a primal perspective to appropriately contextualise the debate. A world without privacy is a world of naked people in every context imaginable. Some might see this as a utopia of sorts but others see it as a dystopia, as a sort of mass concentration camp. I struggle to see how nakedness of such a manner in and of itself represents progress particularly when those calling for such nakedness from the masses are shielded and clothed themselves. Sent from Digitterra
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