Prof. Omri Ben-Shahar: 'Is Your Smartphone Spying On You?'

Privacy Paranoia: Is Your Smartphone Spying On You?

“Smart” devices are spying on us. GoogleMaps tracks our location, smart home lights figure out our vacation, PillDrill knows our medication, and Fitbit records our dedication. Siri or Alexa, needless to say, report every breath we take.

The technological rise of data-driven devices is universally embraced by consumers. Machines that used to provide simple static functionality now perform data-intensive advisory roles. These “smart” machines transmit through the “internet of things” information on how they are being used, and are fed back with alerts prompting consumers to improve usage, save money, and—truth be told—buy more products. There are smart cars, coffeemakers, refrigerators, alarms, baby monitors, watches, wallets, t-shirts, racquets, Barbie dolls and of course phones.

For some observers, however, these machines are threatening social order. In the emerging fraternity of “privacy alarmists,” “smart” is code name for surveillance. Smart devices are spies who infiltrated our intimate spaces, watching us, eavesdropping our conversations, and reporting back to their corporate headquarters. This information is then stored forever and used to prescribe the way we live. It is also used to enrich the creators of the these gadgets. Privacy alarmists view the dissemination of smart devices and the resulting collection of private information as a plot to deny citizens their autonomy and control.

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