A documentary that exposes what corporations and governments learn about people through Internet and cell phone usage, and what can be done about it ... if anything.

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@feardrivencontrol
A documentary that exposes what corporations and governments learn about people through Internet and cell phone usage, and what can be done about it ... if anything.
Helen Nissenbaum is niet alleen een invloedrijk denker over digitale ethiek en privacy; de filosofe bouwt ook samen met hackers technologieën die het digitale dataverzamelaars als Google lastig maken. Ik sprak de bevlogen hoogleraar over het belang én de complexiteit van privacy in de 21ste eeuw.
The philosopher Helen Nissenbaum talks about the importance and complexity of privacy in the 21st century.
Maybe we should start fooling people.
When meeting somebody for the first time, or maybe just viewing a portrait, the brain goes into overdrive for a few seconds to quickly form a first impression. Whether we like it or not, rapid assumptions are made based on age, gender, race, culture, physical appearance, the su
What is your identity? Is it a matter of framing yourself. Or framing others?
Het meest baanbrekende privacy-experiment van de VPRO. Elke donderdag 21.00 bij de VPRO op NPO3.
How important is privacy nowadays? Tim and Nicholas wanted to find that out in a psychological experiment 'Super Stream Me', where they made their lives public for 18 days; toilet visit to a session with the psychologist. Armed with a camera, which was in direct contact with a live stream on vpro.nl/superstreamme they streamden 24-hour. 400,000 people visited the website and the images were viewed nationally and internationally and shared. Their location, heart rate and the number of viewers was a real-time image. Emotions were caught in dates and they were using social media in live communication with the audience, who responded continuously on what they were doing. After 15 days, the experiment is prematurely terminated because of the too violent impact of the lack of privacy.
How is it to be out of the system and not to be able to get back in. You can think of it as freedom but in this documentary you see it is a prison. You live in a world where nobody acknowledges you because you don't have a social security number.
A documentary more then about drugs. Just like they say in the first sentace of the trailer: 'You have to understand the warr on drugs has never been about drugs.' This is a documetnary that shows the power of fear. Prisons are buisnesses that need to be kept running.