Permik 14 hours ago

It's super strange that there's this huge gap of expectation of privacy and lack of social consequences when compared to the past.

Way back when villages and towns were hella smaller, unapproved behavior was nipped on the bud, because people talk and there were less people that you just couldn't disappear into the masses. There were _actual_ real social consequences.

_Technically_ we're just moving back to basics, but the social consequences of the increased awareness should apply to everyone – equally.

  • salawat 2 hours ago

    Counterpoint: There was a 95 year old woman in my life who was a Stephen Minister living in a small town. Stephen Ministry is a bit like being a professional listener. You kind of do outreach and be present for people to help them through hard times. She was a widow, in a small town.

    She would go to a nursing home with a gentleman from the same town, whose wife had come down with Alzheimer's to the point the wife could not recognize her husband most days and would become highly agitated. The wife did recognize the 95 year old woman, with whom the wife had gone to church for many years. The husband would sit in the other room whilst the 95 year old and his wife talked, and share in what lucid moments the woman he loved (his wife) had left.

    The other ladies in the church, on the other hand, found the 95 year old widow's behavior highly scandalous, despite the fact the widow had had no one else in her life, even after her husband passed more than 20 years ago.

    Point being, don't romanticize small town life. It can, in it's own way lead to collective psychological pathologies just as rapidly as urban living does. The difference being that there's no such thing as "community therapy" to get an entire village turned around. Religion is about the closest there is, and ecumenical politics is about as bad as academic politics in it's toxicity. People are hell, and we do ourselves a favor by not making it any easier for anyone to constantly keep tabs on anyone.

    However, I will admit to a bit of schadenfreude that a tech company executive got caught out by this sort of thing.

garciasn 14 hours ago

There is no 'surveillance state' here. There were two people engaged in an apparent affair that were caught and people close to them were notified. These two having an affair is a big ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ and no one should care; however, being these two are the 1) CEO of a company and 2) the head of HR for that same company, the employees of said company, its shareholders (if any), and its board (if any) should be REALLY interested in this. And it has absolutely fucking nothing to do w/surveillance; this could have happened anywhere, at any time in history, with or without technology.

  • JohnFen 14 hours ago

    > There is no 'surveillance state' here.

    I disagree. This is totally an example of how we're living in a surveillance state. A relatively minor example, sure, but it's part and parcel of the fact that it's impossible to exist in public (and difficult to exist in private) without actively being under surveillance.

    If that's not a surveillance state, I don't know what is.

    • jpc0 14 hours ago

      Explain how this is any different than Myrtle down the road saying: “Did you hear Bob and Julie are having an affair, I saw them out at Bobby’s last week!”

      Being out in public has never been a privacy violation, only an anonymity one and who ever guaranteed your anonymity?

      • singleshot_ 13 hours ago

        Okay!

        I live twenty two hundred miles from Bob and Julie but I know exactly who they are, where they work, and why everyone in America thinks they are bad people.

        I am concerned but not surprised that this distinction could escape a person.

        • jpc0 12 hours ago

          You only know about it because it made news, for a high profile person like this a good reporter would likely have picked up the story locally regardless.

          For you neighbour sleeping with a coworker you likely have no idea unless you know who he/she is (good on you if you do, you are a dying breed) and the news would not give a damn.

          Your anonymity isn’t in question here, as the CEO of a company you gave up any right to anonymity and getting caught in public with your mistress was a failure in exposure not a failure of the state to protect your privacy.

          If this was footage from a concert that happen to catch something happening in the CEOs back yard or living room 100% there would be a lawsuit because that would be the invasion of privacy you think it is, the news would likely still run with the story.

          • singleshot_ 11 hours ago

            Wait, where did you get the idea that I think the Coldplay photos are an invasion of privacy? Obviously they are not.

        • garciasn 12 hours ago

          That has absolutely nothing to do w/a surveillance state. Let's pretend it was the 1880s and these two were executives at Standard Oil. They were seen cavorting at the opera together by someone who then tipped off the press and/or their company who then tipped off the press. It might have been big news the next day or the day after that.

          Frankly; this is exactly what happened here. Do you feel there was a 'surveillance state' in the 1880s? I don't.

          • singleshot_ 12 hours ago

            In the 1880s they were missing: the long distance video camera; the real-time display on the Jumbotron; the ability of any concertgoer to snap a quick series of hires photos; the capability to select and edit the best photo; a globally interconnected system of social media platforms to which to post the resulting photos; and a 24 hour doomscrolling apparatus to put the photos in front of of every person in America six times a day for half a week.

            So no, I don’t feel like there was a surveillance state in the nineteenth century for what must now must feel like a collection of the most obvious reasons ever collected in one post.

            • jpc0 11 hours ago

              I’m going to reply here.

              These are effects of a connected society, I’m unsure on whether they are a net good socially but technologically and economically they have been a game changer.

              This has nothing to do with a surveillance state, it might enable it but it enables it in the same way any technology enables the ability to abuse said technology.

              The “state” didn’t publish or share the photos.

              The things you should be complaining about is the state passing laws to get arbitrary access to the cellphone location data of every single person at this event, and being able to link that data to an individual. That is a loss of anonymity that can be a vector to prosecution and you should fight about, and has nothing to do with the information.

              And yes and 5/13 eyes country can and will get that information if they so desire and will likely even share it amongst each other and the public would not need to be any wiser.

              If you are on the “state”’s radar they can absolutely track you to within a few meters across international borders. Technology enabled this, “the people” allowed it. A coldplay concert exposing an affair is unrelated.

      • JohnFen 11 hours ago

        Myrtle down the road would be my neighbors, and they aren't recording. It's a world of difference.

        But understand, I'm not talking about whether or not there's a "privacy violation". I'm talking about being forced to live in a society where you're always under surveillance and so can never really be free.

    • MoonGhost 11 hours ago

      > If that's not a surveillance state, I don't know what is.

      If it is a surveillance then street photography is too. Camera pointing at spectators isn't good either...

    • ncruces 13 hours ago

      If they didn't want to get caught, don't do that in public, cameras or no cameras.

      Could've been 20 years ago in a concert and they bump into someone who knows them while hugging.

      So what's different here? That people on the internet where “quickly” able to figure out who they are because it went viral?

      I'm sure randomly getting caught on national TV 20 years ago could have had the same effect. All it takes is one person to know them.

    • NicuCalcea 13 hours ago

      How do you define a surveillance state?

      • JohnFen 11 hours ago

        A society where you can reasonably expect that you're under constant surveillance.

        • NicuCalcea 11 hours ago

          And you believe that being filmed at the kind of event that normally employs a camera crew to document it is proof that we are under constant surveillance?

  • bdangubic 11 hours ago

    by this definition Thomas Jefferson lived in a surveillance state if someone drew a picture of him as he rode his horse on his farm and showed the painting to a bunch of people :)

  • Barrin92 12 hours ago

    >And it has absolutely fucking nothing to do w/surveillance; this could have happened anywhere, at any time in history, with or without technology.

    It absolutely has. This is what real everyday surveillance is that shapes people's behavior. When you cannot go anywhere without in your head thinking "am I on a camera or a microphone?" you're in a surveillance society. It's significantly more insidious and pervasive than any public camera is.

    I recently talked with a friend about the fact that you don't see people going skinny dipping any more as we did when we were teenagers spending a day at a lake, and it's pretty obvious why. Smartphone cameras, everyone says they're afraid that someone takes an unflattering picture and shares it with the entire internet. That's how you breed a nation of neurotic people. This wasn't possible a few decades ago or at least not practical.

    Every single spot with an internet connection has effectively become a stage where the slightest mishap can turn you into a joke in front of an infinitely large audience. It is no surprise that the mental state of young people is what it is and why they're anxious about the most everyday things. It's literally the logic of the Panopticon, you're going to police yourself harder than anyone externally ever could.

    • tpmoney 8 hours ago

      > It absolutely has. This is what real everyday surveillance is that shapes people's behavior. When you cannot go anywhere without in your head thinking "am I on a camera or a microphone?" you're in a surveillance society. It's significantly more insidious and pervasive than any public camera is.

      I’ve heard discussion around this idea that used “panopticon” as the descriptor. An all seeng eye that might or might not be looking at you right now, but since you can never know, you’re better off not doing anything the eye’s controllers disapprove of.

    • UltraSane 5 hours ago

      They went to a PUBLIC concert with thousands of other people. They could have just as easily ran into people they know as been shown on TV. If you are having an affair don't go to very crowded public places.

      Not too long ago they would have been publicly shamed.

fred_is_fred 14 hours ago

We may well be in a surveillance state but it’s not because of crowd cams at a Coldplay concert.

perilunar 10 hours ago

Sousveillance, not surveillance.