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Would you voluntarily wear an ankle monitor? No? Well thatâs just what youâre doing, and far worse, by carrying that âsmartphoneâ with you everywhere. What if you or someone you care about needs an abortion? What if someone is stalking you? The collapse of personal privacy in the last 20 years, with the advent of the internet, cameras everywhere, and âsmartâ everything including phones, cars, & homes, is a complete Orwellian horror. The blissfully unaware will say âIâm not worried, Iâm not doing anything wrong!â Those are some of the sorriest and most foolishly naĂŻve words ever spoken. You have NO idea, and what you donât know can & WILL hurt you. Being under constant surveillance is one definition of being in a prison. If one hasnât any privacy, one hasnât any freedom.
Weâve no way whatsoever to even know about, let alone correct, the mass of information â and misinformation â about each us thatâs out there. While the government is restricted, youâve no legal protection whatsoever from invasive and pervasive data collection by private companies. Nor do you know whatâs actually considered ârightâ or âwrong.â Thatâs for Big Brother to decide, and Big Brother can change his mind about that, and his opinion of you, at any time without notice.
Thatâs one reason I havenât got Alexa, Firestick, etc. A few years ago there was a scandal here in Europe, saying that Lidl was selling food processors that listened in on things in the household. Donât know if thereâs any truth in that but I do know that the Youtube app in my TV picks up on the TV programmes we watch and feeds me similar stuff.
I remember back in 2015 when Samsung introduced TVs that would take voice commands. That sounded good until someone figured out that everything people said was being recorded and sent to a third party, including intimate and private conversations.
Lessee, how many phones are out there? How many calls and texts do they make daily? How many people work for âthe governmentâ who supposedly read/listen to your every word? Can you imaging the poor agents whoâd have to wade thru the daily inanity of âWhere are you?â Or âWhy didnât you tell me?â Or âPick up some bread on your way home.â
George Carlin âFilthy Wordsâ routine did have a nice spiel in it about a dude who knew his phone was bugged so he said â**** Hooverâ whenever he answered it. For what it is worth Carlin allegedly was on the watch list of both the FCC and FBI during parts of his illustrious career so who knows, maybe his phone was bugged. Amazing talent, he had a lot of great routines about us humans and all of our âstuffâ (both personal baggage and material possessions).
Iâve accepted that someone is probably watching and/or listening to me (I have Facebook, a modern cell phone and Alexa/Ring products). What I canât accept is how I just think about maybe researching or buying a product and see an AD for it, on my PC/phone, an hour later. :)
If the government isnât tracking then Google surely does. This past 2-3 weeks wife and I discussed getting a new Subaru, sure nuff Iâve had at least a half dozen Subaru articles daily show up in my news feed.
From my understanding, itâs all about algorithms. At least once a day I say âElon MuskâŠ.Call me.â. Itâs just a matter of time and Iâm sure he will. Please donât tell me no one is listening.
I guess Iâll pile onto this mess. Years ago, in our Sunday School class, Iâd ask people, what would you think if I gave you a device which would tell me where you are, where youâve been, where you shop, how fast you drive, the groups you belong to, who your friends are, and how often you talk with them? Iâd then hold up a cell phone and add that not only is this happening but youâre paying for it. That was years ago! Today your phone tracks your health, the temp of your house, your finances, and more. And for those who feel sorry for the poor agents, I suggest reading up on the capabilities of the new AI programs. Lastly, I donât consider myself a conspiracy guy, but I do look at facts and consider the possibilities. There are shades of â1984â.
Ten years ago I bought an economy car that had options for basic communication and monitoring capabilities (âfirst month free, but then youâll have to mortgage your childrensâ futureâ). I refused to activate On Star or Sirius â heck I even refused to pay for the âhail damageâ insurance because what part of buying a car under $15K says Iâm rolling in disposable income? The finance manager acted like I was breaking all ten commandments and the Bill of Rights. I wonder if he reported me to the NSA as a malcontent?
The other day I went out for a few hours and inadvertently left my phone at home, which is something I rarely do. Hypothetically, if someone was monitoring me, I wonder what they would have made of that.
my uncle was a Marine then when he got out he worked for government the rest of his lifeâŠand they monitor everything and i mean everything you do onlineâŠemails, textsâŠeverything onlineâŠremember it was the us military (and Hedy Lamarr) that gave us the internet in the first placeâŠeverything is monitoredâŠhe worked for government some 20+ years monitoringâŠour conversation took place many years ago, but he said even if youâre a gardening /landscaping company and you put âkill bushâ in a sentence, redlights went off and your content had to be checked out (obviously Bush was president during our conversation)
Goat, Rat, CLEARLY you have NO idea or are just skimming the surface. Letâs face it: privacy no longer exists. You go into ANY country on this planet and you WILL be monitored; sound, video and anything you type in. Why? To root out the subversives? To steal our secrets? To find ways to bring world superpowers to their knees and take over? Maybe all the above.
The only way I can advise you on maintaining your privacy is to limit how much you give out or donât give out anything. Cut off all forms of communication and secure all data from being collected. Of course, that will make you into a hermit and good luck getting far with socialized services. Not to mention, realizing thereâs still data publicly available about you since birth: social security number, birth certificate, medical records, etc.
Of course the government does, ever heard of the âCarnivoreâ program that the FBI and Homeland Security use to filter our âdangerous wordsâ that might be used in a conversation.And, given the FACT that law enforcement, will fight tooth and nail, to gain access to YOUR locked cell phone, just as they will attach tracking devices (without a warrant authorizing them to do so) to your vehicle, or install, again without a warrant, cameras on YOUR property, to monitor your activities.Law enforcement IS the single greatest threat to OUR Constitution, and the RIGHTS that we once thought were inviolate. After all, the Constitution, in this day and age of domestic terrorism, and âinsurrectionâ, adherence to the dictates of the Constitution, prevents them form âdoing their jobâ.
Itâs not gathering the info. It floods in on itâs own. Itâs sorting through it for anything useful. Thatâs where AI will save the day. A little training on J. Edgarâs âThings Commies Sayâ manual and it will be ready to go.
BE THIS GUY about 1 year ago
It would be nice if pay phones were still around.
BasilBruce about 1 year ago
Androids can be spies?
leopardglily about 1 year ago
I use my phone for memes, texting my friends, comics, and goofy pictures of my dogs. The FBI agent tracking that $hit must be so dang bored.
Alexander the Good Enough about 1 year ago
Would you voluntarily wear an ankle monitor? No? Well thatâs just what youâre doing, and far worse, by carrying that âsmartphoneâ with you everywhere. What if you or someone you care about needs an abortion? What if someone is stalking you? The collapse of personal privacy in the last 20 years, with the advent of the internet, cameras everywhere, and âsmartâ everything including phones, cars, & homes, is a complete Orwellian horror. The blissfully unaware will say âIâm not worried, Iâm not doing anything wrong!â Those are some of the sorriest and most foolishly naĂŻve words ever spoken. You have NO idea, and what you donât know can & WILL hurt you. Being under constant surveillance is one definition of being in a prison. If one hasnât any privacy, one hasnât any freedom.
Weâve no way whatsoever to even know about, let alone correct, the mass of information â and misinformation â about each us thatâs out there. While the government is restricted, youâve no legal protection whatsoever from invasive and pervasive data collection by private companies. Nor do you know whatâs actually considered ârightâ or âwrong.â Thatâs for Big Brother to decide, and Big Brother can change his mind about that, and his opinion of you, at any time without notice.
ronaldspence about 1 year ago
scarier than we think
Maizing about 1 year ago
My only phone is a landline and I donât own any âsmartâ technology.
GreasyOldTam about 1 year ago
Apparently the Chinese government is doing exactly that. They even track who is walking down the street next to you.
Gent about 1 year ago
Okay Google. Stops spying on me.
Gent about 1 year ago
So Obama era surveillance is back eh.
orinoco womble about 1 year ago
Thatâs one reason I havenât got Alexa, Firestick, etc. A few years ago there was a scandal here in Europe, saying that Lidl was selling food processors that listened in on things in the household. Donât know if thereâs any truth in that but I do know that the Youtube app in my TV picks up on the TV programmes we watch and feeds me similar stuff.
David_the_CAD about 1 year ago
That is not the reason that I do not have a cell phone, but I think I may add that to the list of reasons.
Purple People Eater about 1 year ago
I remember back in 2015 when Samsung introduced TVs that would take voice commands. That sounded good until someone figured out that everything people said was being recorded and sent to a third party, including intimate and private conversations.
mwest about 1 year ago
Lessee, how many phones are out there? How many calls and texts do they make daily? How many people work for âthe governmentâ who supposedly read/listen to your every word? Can you imaging the poor agents whoâd have to wade thru the daily inanity of âWhere are you?â Or âWhy didnât you tell me?â Or âPick up some bread on your way home.â
Really??
cdward about 1 year ago
Itâs not the government I worry about. Itâs the corporate bosses who have all the information. And they have no accountability to the citizenry.
iggyman about 1 year ago
How many times have you looked up a product, and all of a sudden getting deluged with ads about that item? Big Brother is watching!
iggyman about 1 year ago
Every time you use a credit card, you are being tracked by what you buy and sent to others for advertisement purposes!
iggyman about 1 year ago
Ny daughter was given Alexa as a gift, it sits unused under the China cabinet, never activated!
Aviatrexx Premium Member about 1 year ago
Smart kid. Now, how many commenters here access this forum via a VPN?
TampaFanatic1 about 1 year ago
George Carlin âFilthy Wordsâ routine did have a nice spiel in it about a dude who knew his phone was bugged so he said â**** Hooverâ whenever he answered it. For what it is worth Carlin allegedly was on the watch list of both the FCC and FBI during parts of his illustrious career so who knows, maybe his phone was bugged. Amazing talent, he had a lot of great routines about us humans and all of our âstuffâ (both personal baggage and material possessions).
Count Olaf Premium Member about 1 year ago
Get a flip phone. Itâll drive The Ministry of Truth nuts wondering what youâre up to.
mfrasca about 1 year ago
The STASI tried.
mfrasca about 1 year ago
Panopticon phone.
akachman Premium Member about 1 year ago
Not a new concept. Social security numbers. Even dates of birth.
Go BRUINS about 1 year ago
Iâve accepted that someone is probably watching and/or listening to me (I have Facebook, a modern cell phone and Alexa/Ring products). What I canât accept is how I just think about maybe researching or buying a product and see an AD for it, on my PC/phone, an hour later. :)
colddonkey about 1 year ago
If the government isnât tracking then Google surely does. This past 2-3 weeks wife and I discussed getting a new Subaru, sure nuff Iâve had at least a half dozen Subaru articles daily show up in my news feed.
Differentname about 1 year ago
According to Wiki, the East German secret police employed 2.5% of the population as undercover spies.
Ellis97 about 1 year ago
I mainly just use my phone for web browsing and occasionally contacting people.
Gameguy49 Premium Member about 1 year ago
Donât even THINK about buying a new car or your phone will start showing you the new models.
chris_o42 about 1 year ago
My phone is usually lost or dead, so good luck tracking me.
[Traveler] Premium Member about 1 year ago
I recently watched the movie Eagle Eye, interesting concept
Egrayjames about 1 year ago
From my understanding, itâs all about algorithms. At least once a day I say âElon MuskâŠ.Call me.â. Itâs just a matter of time and Iâm sure he will. Please donât tell me no one is listening.
Goat from PBS about 1 year ago
The great thing about phones: they can be turned off.
MS72 about 1 year ago
And everybody thinks Google is benign!
KageKat about 1 year ago
Not helping, Rat!
bigplayray about 1 year ago
Cameras are in the birds! Birds are robots!
NaryGancy about 1 year ago
I guess Iâll pile onto this mess. Years ago, in our Sunday School class, Iâd ask people, what would you think if I gave you a device which would tell me where you are, where youâve been, where you shop, how fast you drive, the groups you belong to, who your friends are, and how often you talk with them? Iâd then hold up a cell phone and add that not only is this happening but youâre paying for it. That was years ago! Today your phone tracks your health, the temp of your house, your finances, and more. And for those who feel sorry for the poor agents, I suggest reading up on the capabilities of the new AI programs. Lastly, I donât consider myself a conspiracy guy, but I do look at facts and consider the possibilities. There are shades of â1984â.
ladykat Premium Member about 1 year ago
I use my phone to scan Facebook, text friends and family, and thatâs pretty much it.
CitizenOfTheValley about 1 year ago
I use my cell phone to call AAA or 911 and to listen to audio books when I drive.
aerotica69 about 1 year ago
Ten years ago I bought an economy car that had options for basic communication and monitoring capabilities (âfirst month free, but then youâll have to mortgage your childrensâ futureâ). I refused to activate On Star or Sirius â heck I even refused to pay for the âhail damageâ insurance because what part of buying a car under $15K says Iâm rolling in disposable income? The finance manager acted like I was breaking all ten commandments and the Bill of Rights. I wonder if he reported me to the NSA as a malcontent?
Zebrastripes about 1 year ago
Thereâs mics and cameras everywhereâŠ.especially AlexaâŠwhat a nosey BÂĄtch!
LOL!
Kaputnik about 1 year ago
The other day I went out for a few hours and inadvertently left my phone at home, which is something I rarely do. Hypothetically, if someone was monitoring me, I wonder what they would have made of that.
rugeirn about 1 year ago
If they really want to surveille the inside of my left hip pocket, I guess theyâre welcome to it.
oakie817 about 1 year ago
my uncle was a Marine then when he got out he worked for government the rest of his lifeâŠand they monitor everything and i mean everything you do onlineâŠemails, textsâŠeverything onlineâŠremember it was the us military (and Hedy Lamarr) that gave us the internet in the first placeâŠeverything is monitoredâŠhe worked for government some 20+ years monitoringâŠour conversation took place many years ago, but he said even if youâre a gardening /landscaping company and you put âkill bushâ in a sentence, redlights went off and your content had to be checked out (obviously Bush was president during our conversation)
dsom8 about 1 year ago
Big Brother speaks; Big Sister (Alexa) listens. Hey, Google!
raybarb44 about 1 year ago
Donât ever under estimate what a a bad/corrupt government can doâŠâŠ
royq27 about 1 year ago
I donât know, East Germany was able to do itâŠ
OBBWG about 1 year ago
If the government is not tracking me either they are not doing their job or I am not trying hard enough.
Ina Tizzy about 1 year ago
Goatâs nose looks like it has eyes.
John Jorgensen about 1 year ago
Itâs possible that the ubiquity of smart phones is allowing someone to snoop, but I wouldnât bet on it being the government.
marilynnbyerly about 1 year ago
Whoever spies on me is in some office somewhere, a dried up skeleton covered with cobwebs. He died of boredom.
WCraft about 1 year ago
I constantly have to remind a family member that the U.S. Government has better things to do then track and spy on himâŠ
zeexenon about 1 year ago
Cameras everywhere ⊠eek ⊠the paranoids are after me.
willie_mctell about 1 year ago
Bill Gates personally placed nano-microchips in everyone who received the COVID vaccine. /s
Bilan about 1 year ago
If theyâre using the camera on my phone, they have nice pictures of the lint in my pocket.
Brilliant_Birdie about 1 year ago
They wouldnât be missing much on me.
minty_Joe about 1 year ago
Goat, Rat, CLEARLY you have NO idea or are just skimming the surface. Letâs face it: privacy no longer exists. You go into ANY country on this planet and you WILL be monitored; sound, video and anything you type in. Why? To root out the subversives? To steal our secrets? To find ways to bring world superpowers to their knees and take over? Maybe all the above.
The only way I can advise you on maintaining your privacy is to limit how much you give out or donât give out anything. Cut off all forms of communication and secure all data from being collected. Of course, that will make you into a hermit and good luck getting far with socialized services. Not to mention, realizing thereâs still data publicly available about you since birth: social security number, birth certificate, medical records, etc.
Sorry, thereâs no easy answer to all this.
priyansh.jeziel about 1 year ago
Of course the government does, ever heard of the âCarnivoreâ program that the FBI and Homeland Security use to filter our âdangerous wordsâ that might be used in a conversation.And, given the FACT that law enforcement, will fight tooth and nail, to gain access to YOUR locked cell phone, just as they will attach tracking devices (without a warrant authorizing them to do so) to your vehicle, or install, again without a warrant, cameras on YOUR property, to monitor your activities.Law enforcement IS the single greatest threat to OUR Constitution, and the RIGHTS that we once thought were inviolate. After all, the Constitution, in this day and age of domestic terrorism, and âinsurrectionâ, adherence to the dictates of the Constitution, prevents them form âdoing their jobâ.
TIMH about 1 year ago
Anyone spying on me is very bored.
hitman4cookies about 1 year ago
Pastis, YOUâRE the G.O.A.T.
eddi-TBH about 1 year ago
Itâs not gathering the info. It floods in on itâs own. Itâs sorting through it for anything useful. Thatâs where AI will save the day. A little training on J. Edgarâs âThings Commies Sayâ manual and it will be ready to go.
kittygatos about 1 year ago
Now the Army says no high school diploma neededâŠ.Com/
CalLadyQED about 1 year ago
Goat is way behinds the times. This is a joke for 2016