Ο Όργουελ επιβεβαιώνεται. Έρχεται η παρακολούθηση των πάντων μέσω και των οικιακών συσκευών.
Διαβάστε για αυτό το εφιαλτικό σενάριο μέσα απο την ακόλουθη αναδημοσιέυση απο το μεγάλο ρώσικο διεθνές κανάλι Russia Today
In America, TV watches you: CIA to spy on people through household items
With a growing number of ‘smart gadgets,’ spying on homes may start
to become much easier. In fact, CIA Chief David Petraeus admitted that
Americans were effectively bugging themselves and making it easy for spy
agencies to peek in on their lives.
Speaking at a summit for In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital firm,
Petraeus noted that new devices that link ‘dumb’ home appliances such as
refrigerators, ovens and lighting systems to the Internet could “change
our notion of secrecy.”
“‘Transformational’ is an overused word,
but I do believe it properly applies to these technologies, particularly
to their effect on clandestine tradecraft,” Petraeus noted.
“Items of interest will be located, identified, monitored, and remotely controlled through technologies such as radio-frequency identification, sensor networks, tiny embedded servers, and energy harvesters — all connected to the next-generation Internet using abundant, low-cost, and high-power computing,” Petraeus explained. “The latter now going to cloud computing, in many areas greater and greater supercomputing, and, ultimately, heading to quantum computing.”
In
the meantime, the biggest microchip company in the world, ARM,
presented new processors that can be implanted into nearly any household
appliance and connect it to the Internet so that the appliance could be
remotely controlled in tandem with other applications. The company
described the concept as the “Internet of things.”
And the
National Security Agency is already building a gigantic supercomputer to
process this gigantic amount of information. It’s a $2 billion
Utah-based facility that can process yottabytes (a quadrillion
gigabytes) of data, according to the Gizmondo technology blog. It will
be the centerpiece for the Global Information Grid and is set to go live
in September 2013.
These latest announcements paint a
somewhat Orwellian picture of the future, with TV’s spying on their
viewers and beds recording the dreams of those sleeping in them. Perhaps
this data would then be sent to the Utah supercomputer, which would
assess the person’s pros and cons. And what if the computer uses
statistics to decipher the likelihood that that person will commit a
crime? A score could land you in jail – for a crime that had not yet
happened.
But even now we see how people are being arrested
for posting online or clicking the wrong button in the privacy of their
own home. A British teenager is set to appear in court on charges of
racially aggravated assault after posting comments about six British soldiers killed in Afghanistan.
Καλά όλα αυτά αλλά μάλλον δε θα τους βγουν έτσι όπως τα θέλουν. Τουλάχιστον σε παγκόσμιο επίπεδο.
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