Technology as Tattletale 69
The New York Times is carrying an article noting the increasing presence of location-sensing technologies in our lives. It discusses several applications of the technology like tracking stolen cash from a bank, or making sure a teenage son follows the rules. The article also notes that these ultra-high resolution GPS trackers can allow freedom as much as restrict it: "Project Lifesaver, a nonprofit group in Chesapeake, Va., fits Alzheimer's patients and autistic children with radio frequency beacons disguised as bracelets, which help emergency responders find them if they are lost. Next spring the group will introduce new bracelets, created by Locator Systems, a British Columbia company, that combine radio signals with G.P.S. and cellular communications. That should allow caregivers to establish a zone where patients can safely wander, said Jim McIntosh, the company's chief executive. If patients wander off, emergency crews could receive more specific information."
"As much" is the key phrase (Score:1, Interesting)
I have a feeling that the helping of a couple of autistic children is not going to offset the massive use by 'nannies.' Saying that it can allow freedom *as much* as restricting it is only trying to put a good face on a device that has massive civil liberty concerns.
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No wonder you people need lords and masters to tell you when to breathe.
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Re:"As much" is the key phrase (Score:5, Insightful)
The fence is like that which a dog learns of early in life inside the electric fence. Walk too far and BZZT. Eventually even if the power dies, that dog will NEVER test the limits again (unless he's one of those rare individuals that resist submission at all costs (dominant/alpha)).
I don't see this as being that useful, other than as a way to keep the cattle of mankind in line and teach them that "someone's always watching"... the great "eye in the sky" and all.
The upside is that there will be plenty who will exercise their freedom, and circumvent these technologies, and eventually leave this planet to the meek/cattle-people to live on. It is the only logical outcome. You cannot "save the world" because it includes the bovine-men alongside those who will not be cowed, and the bovines refuse to be saved... better to be hamburger for sure than to contest with the wild beasts for survival on the range. The only solution is to leave (if anyone suggests crushing the bovine-people in a genocidal armageddon, while fun to entertain in Quake 4 Enemy Territory, in real life, such an endeavor is doomed to fail, and in the unlikely event of success, the drain on the psyche would leave the victors in worse shape than the now nonexistent losers). And I would not be too surprised if the exodus I'm suggesting, has happened at least once before in the history of mankind.
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Nothing in life is an absolute or
When I tied my pup... he did the following. (Score:2)
Now... when I first rai
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The way I see it, as long as he's barking all is well, if he stops barking THEN I worry
Re:"As much" is the key phrase (Score:4, Insightful)
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I think this device has massive child-raising concerns, but your suggestion that parents cannot keep track of their children--whom they are ultimately responsible for--is silly.
You wrote:
Wow, man, just wow. According to you, I should have been dead, as should all my extended family.
Now, as a random Slashdotter who just stumbled into TFCommentPage, I must say that this is a very impressive non sequitor. (And there's a lot of other stuff I could say about the exchange, but I'll refrain.)
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You couldn't have made a better argument for tracking your children. You absolutely must look after their safety, but if you can't know where they are once out of the house, then you can't let them out of the house. On the other hand, if you sit them down and say you can leave the house, you can do whatever, but I have to be able to find you, then you can give them freedom that you couldn't have before.
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And what about all of the generations that grew up before tracking? I was 21 before I or anyone I knew had cell phones. And even then I just had one because I was driving
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You assume that your parents would have restricted your freedom more if they'd been able to?
I think not, I think your parents would have treated you pretty much the way they did and you would have become pretty much the person you are. Ditto for me. Those previous generations, I think *most* but certainly not all of them got the same freedoms our parents tried to give us. But that's not the group of parents and kids this would make much difference for. I can think of a group of kids that were pretty much g
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Hell, look at some of the most messed up people you personally know, most of them will also come from very religious backgrounds.
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Not such things as a ultra-high rez GPS? (Score:2)
these ultra-high resolution GPS trackers
Misleading. The article is clearer: "The change is powered less by new technologies than the artful combination of existing ones, mainly the Internet, cellphones and G.P.S. satellites."
Some info. GPS receivers, which most of them use U.S. 'GPS' satellites -and- Russian GLONASS satellites (and eventually Europe's GALILEO and China's COMPASS 'GPS' systems), don't really have multiple spatial resolutions, only one. But yes, there are differences. In the article's case, they mix it with other spatial data to g
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Unless it is used by government for tracking purposes your massive civil liberty concerns simply do not exist.
Private individuals have the right to decide how they want to employee such a device; and I would agree there are privacy concerns if co
Sucks to be Young (sometimes) (Score:1)
Generation S & Generation P - Copyright mastershake_phd 2007
Re:Sucks to be Young (sometimes) (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, wait, that already happened, you say?
Well then by all means tag the little bastards. And someone make me a device that yells "Get off my lawn!" whenever kids get close...I'm far too busy doing my own stuff and neglecting real life to be bothered...
</rant>
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Oh, wait, that already happened, you say?
Well then by all means tag the little bastards. And someone make me a device that yells "Get off my lawn!" whenever kids get close...I'm far too busy doing my own stuff and neglecting real life to be bothered...
A friend of mine has kids, hes in his mid 20s. We were talking about
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From your source " 876,213 missing persons (adults and juveniles) were entered into the FBI's NCIC during the year 2000."
Most of the kids who are reported missing are found obviously, and tagging them would help find them faster. But, out of all those missing children very few are taken by strangers e
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can != does (Score:3, Insightful)
Why stop there? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Easy to see where this will lead.
It'll either be the generation that grows up hopelessly deranged because of the constant surveilance, or the generation that grows into docile little drones that do as they're told because they can't shake the feeling that someone's watching them...
Put on electric collars that zap you if you step "out of bounds".
Heh. While they're at it they can give the collar the voice of GLaDOS [wikipedia.org] so it can issue warnings, instructions, and inspirational anecdotes.*
* Those that haven't played Portal, or listened to someone who has played Portal rant incessantly about the Weighted Compa
Bunch of idiots - this DOES increase freedom (Score:2, Interesting)
Or one of the first independent generations in years?
Seriously, do you think that most kids get to go wherever they want as soon as they're old enough to ask? Do you think that most kids are at home because they want to be or because their parents feel like they aren't safe roaming the neighborhood? I doubt most kids in the last eighty years were allowed to visit neighbors or wander the neighborhood before they were fifteen. Two hundred years ago in colonial America, kids could just take off and play or ha
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Instead I see all these idiotic posts making the assumption that parents are letting their kids have freedom but just waiting for a gadget to restrict it.
I think you misunderstood what I and (possibly, I can't speak for anyone but myself) others are saying. The assumption is that parents these days are, by and large, the morns that "aren't letting their kids have freedom" and that much of the freedom that kids do get is had by evading the parents, which would become impossible if they were all tagged or collared with a tracking device. How free would you really be roaming the streets if you know your parents are probably watching and might yell at you over
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WTF? Where and when did you grow up that kids were kept in the house all the time?
I was certainly wandering the neighborhood long before I was fifteen. Spent a lot of time playing in the woods even. Went over friends houses. Rode my bike to the library, to the arcade, to the mall. This was only about twenty-five years ago.
Let's not use a wide brush here..... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Let's not use a wide brush here..... (Score:4, Insightful)
True, the morality of something like a GPS is much harder to weigh than, say, a flamethrower. But that is a reason to be more careful, not less. We pretty much accept that when people develop a new piece of hardware, they have a responsibility to make sure it won't explode in your face (unless it's, you know, a face-exploder, which I'm sure someone is working on in God's great US of A). When your bank put's up a new web site, we all presume they have spent a lot of time making sure it's secure. It's about time we started holding technology companies just as responsible for thinking through privacy issues before releasing something.
If the mp3 player catches fire in your pants, it's broken and should not have been released. If the website lets hackers get your bank account number, it's broken and should not have been released. If the car tells dad you spent the night at your girlfriend's house instead of at boy scouts, or tells the department of homeland security you stopped by the mosque, it's broken and should not have been released.
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Wow. Yet more of the attitude "the user is too dumb to make moral decisions on their own, so we have to make them for him". And you wonder why the government illegally seizes power in the name of a higher cause.
Keep in mind the exact same GPS unit could be used for keeping track of where you le
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Wow.
My sentiments exactly. This is an extremely confused screed you've got going here. Let's try to step through this and apply a little rational thought, shall we?
If the car tells dad you spent the night at your girlfriend's house instead of at boy scouts, or tells the department of homeland security you stopped by the mosque, it's broken and should not have been released.
Yet more of the attitude "the user is too dumb to make moral decisions on their own, so we have to make them for him".
Who exactly is "the user" here? The mosque visitor has no scope to apply a "moral decision" to not be tracked and thus profiled. Technology affects people beyond those who pay for it, thus free-market libertarianist bullshit doesn't really shed any light on this issue.
And you wonder why the government illegally seizes power in the name of a higher cause.
No. I don't wonder that. That's very clear to me. What I wonder is why s
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By your logic (Score:1)
Lets assume that the technology is used in exactly the way you suggest, to track the whereabouts of minors and people the government is afraid of.
As far as being watched by Dad, here are the real options:
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I think you've gone way off base here. Yes, "technology is neutral" is a cliche, but believe it or not, sometimes cliches are true. Your specious guillotine example has already been discussed elsewhere. When I say "neutral," I don't mean that the potential uses or motives of the users are neutral -- I'm saying that, for example, a GPS system doesn't know or care who it is tracking or why -- the same technology can be used to protect the eldery or mentally ill, to locate a dangerous criminal, or to violate t
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That said, please explain why the guillotine example is "specious." You can't dismiss an argument just because some moron disagreed with it. I think it's a very good example. A person manufacturing guillotines knows exactly what use they will be put to. If you believe there is a moral weight to capital punishment, then there is a moral weight to the manufacture of guillotines. Hard to get a mor
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Well, if you consider a guillotine in context, it is actually a good thing. Prior to the guillotine, executions were done by hanging, or by using an axe - and a guillotine is a much more humane approach.
In hanging, if the drop was too short, you would slowly suffocate to death instead of getting a broken neck. When using a headsman and an axe, it wasn't that uncommon for the headsman to "miss" and require multiple blows to actually remove the head. With a guillotine, you guarantee a fast, relatively p
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The world gets better when people refuse to give ground on things that they consider principles, rather than hand waving about things th
I have no problem with GPS tracking in cars (Score:4, Interesting)
We lose too many children every year to auto accidents and perhaps knowing they are being watched over will save a few from fruitless loss. It could do very well to protect them as well from actions outside of their control - giving responders guidance to where they are in an emergency.
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1: The more intelligent ones think twice about copying that
2: We're rid of some morons.
Now if we could get them to kill themselves without hurting others... that would be efficient.
Sometimes people die. Losing freedom over a bit of security is plain stupid.
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Yeah, that sounds great.... (Score:2)
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Screw that (Score:1)
A new one for our area (Score:2)
Our bus/trolley system in Minneapolis/St Paul has been operating for years on a cash or disposable card system with the cards having unlimited monthly value or a cash value. They have recently completed testing and are pushing a swipe card that isn't disposable and has a unique serial number. You can add value to it online and a couple days later it will appear on the card when you use it. Obviously because the readers are a wifi connection to the system.
So it's all in the q
Not for my kids (Score:2, Insightful)
Having said that, I make a lot of effort to know where my children are, in more ways than one. Not just phys
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That said, my parents always knew where I was, or at least who
Poor-man's GPS (Score:3, Funny)
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I tried that, but it did indeed make me a poor-man. In fact, it didn't take long until I couldn't make the payments. Unfortunately they didn't repo the wife, only turned off the service.
Not inherently bad...like any tool (Score:2)
It usually starts off with good uses - but also keep in mind, that when a government wants to have more control over the population or make a change that will have far, wide, and long ranging impacts they ALWAYS initially claim it is for the "good of the people and will never be abused."
Two examples? Your Social Security card. My original one has in big letters on the front" NOT TO BE USED FOR IDENTIFICATION PURPOSES." Because at the time these SSNs
call a spde a spade (Score:1)
The simple irreducible fact of tech like these GPS nanny boxes is that they are castrating our society, and our next generation in particular. Disabling your [son's] vehicle because he was so [Mr. Burns air quotes] sneaky [/mr burns] as to drive to the next town is beyond assinine, it daddy-dicksizing, public humiliation and teaches
This stuf
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ZZZTTTT!!! "Citizen must return to safe area..." (Score:1)