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Brave New World?
Townhall.com ^ | March 22, 2018 | Derek Hunter

Posted on 03/22/2018 7:01:05 AM PDT by Kaslin

We were promised flying cars and virtual reality that was indistinguishable from the real things, what we got was a mess. The future wasn’t all it was cracked up to be, but it was never going to be. At least not in our lifetimes.

That technology has made our lives easier, and some would say better, isn’t really a matter for debate. But advances have begun to outpace common sense and, more importantly, our readiness for them.

This week, two stories highlighted just how unprepared we are for the future that resides just around the corner.

First, the “Facebook data breach” that wasn’t. 

You’ve undoubtedly heard the stories about how Cambridge Analytica, a campaign data company that worked for the Trump campaign, either stole, hacked, or through some other nefarious way mined personal information from 50 million Americans and used it to target ads on Facebook to people likely receptive to them. Honestly, it’s a yawn of a story, and would be ignored if a Democrat had done it. Actually, it wouldn’t be ignored, it would be praised…because it was when the Obama campaign did essentially the same thing in 2012.

“Why not try sifting through self-described supporters’ Facebook pages in search of friends who might be on the campaign’s list of the most persuadable voters? Then the campaign could ask the self-identified supporters to bring their undecided friends along. The technique, as they saw it, could also get supporters to urge friends to register to vote, to vote early or to volunteer and donate,” wrote the New York Times in a 2013 story about President Obama’s reelection campaign.

Add to that the confession by a former campaign staffer that they basically took whatever they wanted from Facebook, with their blessing, and you begin to think there might be double standards at work here.

Hilariously, the pearl-clutching extended to the concept of data collection by Facebook itself. What did people think they do there? Having billions of members who join something for free isn’t exactly the pathway to getting rich, unless and until you do something with all the information your members voluntarily give you. It’s a trade – you get to post cat videos and vacation pictures on their website so you can make your friends jealous, they get to sell advertisements based on the information you give them. 

Would anyone have signed up for Facebook if it were $50 a year but there were no ads? Maybe, but only a fraction of what they currently have. Just like people wouldn’t use gmail if they had to pay for it. But those “free” services have to be paid for somehow. The piper doesn’t play for free.

The conveniences and luxuries technology offer us come at a price. Not cash, but a tiny bit of our privacy. If you don’t like it, you don’t have to sign up. But just because no one reads the iTunes user agreement doesn’t mean you aren’t bound by it. 

The details of the Cambridge story are unimportant, users agreed to it and they exploited it. If it didn’t involve the Trump campaign, it wouldn’t be a story. Since it did, there will likely be congressional hearings. 

(I will say this: It’s rather amusing watching the media report this Facebook data story in outraged, “invasion of privacy” terms while they downplay the clear abuse of the FISA system to spy on Trump campaign officials. One is a private company going about their business legally, the other is the government spying on its citizens trying to send some of them to prison. Which is worse, apparently, depends upon who you voted for in 2016.)

Second, while we won’t have flying cars anytime soon (and thank God for that, considering how bad so many people are on the ground), we are flying toward having driverless cars. This would be great for disabled people, and the blind in particular. However, as is always the case with major leaps forward, there are a lot of questions as to what it will really mean for people.

While there are many cars on the roads without anyone at the wheel being tested across the country, and there have been a number of accidents (all the fault of the human drivers around them, or so we’re told), this week we saw the first fatality involving one. 

A woman in Arizona was hit and killed by an Uber driverless car on Monday. What exactly happened we don’t yet know, and we also don’t know what it means for the technology. 

From the start, questions dogged this idea. “What if a car knows it can’t stop in time before hitting a group of kids getting off a bus, and the only alternative is to drive off a cliff and kill the car’s occupants?” is a common “What if” scenario programmers have to grapple with. 

What isn’t being discussed, at least not yet publicly, is who is ultimately responsible when something like what happened in Arizona becomes common? 

You likely haven’t thought about driverless car insurance, but the current car insurance market isn’t prepared to deal with it. Who’s responsible when no one is driving? The programmer? The manufacturer? The owner of the car? 

The actuarial tables haven’t been created to deal with the prospect of millions of cars with no one at the wheel being on the road or how to assign responsibility when everything goes according to programming and something still goes wrong. 

If a semi-truck flips on black ice, is the company whose goods it was hauling responsible for any injuries or damage to others? We don’t know. And you can’t really insure against something where blame can’t yet be ascribed. 

The rules and regulations are only just now being considered, but the possibilities they’re going to have to compensate for are limitless. Congress, which is going to have a heavy hand in the development of them (which means you can expect the process to go as smoothly as everything else they do), has no idea how to handle this. The future may be driverless, but when the future is a Congress and state and federal bureaucracies away, it may never get here. 

We’re entering a time when technological advancements risk outpacing our ability to adapt to them. Some will be exploited for political gain, others run risk of creating a regulatory and legal mess. What could go wrong when the same people who designed and implemented Obamacare are looking to involve themselves in social media and draw the map for driverless cars? If history is any guide, pretty much everything. 



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: driverlessvehicles; technology
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1 posted on 03/22/2018 7:01:05 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Article pretty mush reflects my opinion. I find it comical that people think its “news” that Facebook, or anyone else on the internet, records their information.

It’s why I’ve always been careful about what I post.

Duh.


2 posted on 03/22/2018 7:09:35 AM PDT by robroys woman (So you're not confused, I'm using my wife's account.)
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To: Kaslin

For all those addicted to tech....be careful what you wish for


3 posted on 03/22/2018 7:16:41 AM PDT by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds)
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To: Kaslin
As they say:

"The Future Ain't What It Used To Be"


4 posted on 03/22/2018 7:21:01 AM PDT by Iron Munro (If Illegals voted Republican 66 Million Democrats Would Be Screaming "Build The Wall!")
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To: Kaslin
That technology has made our lives easier, and some would say better, isn’t really a matter for debate.

Oh, I quite disagree, Mr. Hunter. Technology can make some lives easier, but then there are those that use technology to simply increase their factor of laziness. Tech is leading us down the road to Idiocracy and much more towards Elysium vice Star Trek.

5 posted on 03/22/2018 7:22:34 AM PDT by rjsimmon (The Tree of Liberty Thirsts)
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To: Kaslin

We have virtual lives now instead of real ones.


6 posted on 03/22/2018 7:27:24 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn)
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To: Kaslin

Most of us understood from the beginning that anything we posted online was the same as publishing it in the daily newspaper.


7 posted on 03/22/2018 7:30:27 AM PDT by abclily
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To: GOPJ; Jane Long; HarleyLady27; RitaOK; DollyCali; Tennessee Nana; sickoflibs; TADSLOS; AuntB; ...
WHAT THEY WANT YOU TO BELIEVE Cambridge Analytica worked for the Trump campaign, and either stole, hacked, or through some other nefarious way mined personal information from 50 million Americans and used it to target ads on Facebook to people likely receptive to them.......activities that were lauded as leading edge stuff when Democrats did it.

WHERE WAS ZUCKERBERG when the Obama campaign used Facebook as a campaign tool in 2012?

Obama suggesting to his supporters: “Why not try sifting through my self-described supporters’ Facebook pages in search of friends who might be on the campaign’s list of the most persuadable voters? Then the campaign could ask the self-identified supporters to bring their undecided friends along. The technique, as they saw it, could also get supporters to urge friends to register to vote, to vote early or to volunteer and donate,” wrote the New York Times in a 2013 story about President Obama’s reelection campaign.

Add to that obscenity, the confession by a former Obama campaign staffer that they basically took whatever they wanted from Facebook, with Facebook's blessing.

As the criticism of Trump escalates, you recognize that Zuckerberg has stupidly enforced double standards, never expecting to get caught.

Let's see....last report was that Facebook lost $50 BILLION in value.

8 posted on 03/22/2018 7:30:40 AM PDT by Liz ((Our side has 8 trillion bullets;the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.))
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To: Iron Munro

Your first cartoon is a picture of hopeful dreams.

Your second cartoon is a picture of a democrat rally.


9 posted on 03/22/2018 7:32:32 AM PDT by abclily
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To: abclily

“Most of us understood from the beginning that anything we posted online was the same as publishing it in the daily newspaper.”

we older, more knowledgeable,and possibly wiser generations figured this out early on. as one of the first users of email over two decades ago, even before it was available to the general public, we had a rule of thumb that, as you said, one should never put anything in an email you wouldn’t want blared onto the front pages of the newspapers. Another version was never to put anything in an email you wouldn’t want your mother to read the next day ...

I think part of the problem is that the younger generations aren’t being taught many of the important lessons of life, either by their parents or government schools ...


10 posted on 03/22/2018 8:25:29 AM PDT by catnipman ( Cat Nipman: Vote Republican in 2012 and only be called racist one more time!)
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To: Liz

...activities that were lauded as leading edge stuff when Democrats did it. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

And they ALSO used encrypted social media throughout the ME to make the magic negros Arab Spring happened
in order to destabilize the entire Middle East: Libya, Sudan,Somalia, Egypt, Kenya,Syria , spreading the Libyan arsena;l across the ME, opening up Africa to the tender mercies of newly armed Muslim terrorists like Boko Haram.

Yahoo and Facebook brought that about through training the radicals in the use of social media to organize encrypted radical communications, protests, riots and armed conflict.
The fact that the Dems used Yahoo and Google for that was assumed “cutting edge.”

If the Trump campaign engaged in data mining, they were “dirty tricks?” Thats just so much bull.

When the right uses the left’s techniques and wins...the left squeal like stick pigs.It is to laugh.

Zuck the F*ck is a part of the liberal fascist mafia trying to take down President Trump. He should be indicted and frog marched to the nearest federal lock up remand pending trial.
No mercy.


11 posted on 03/22/2018 8:47:36 AM PDT by Candor7 ((Obama Fascism)http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2009/05/barack_obama_the_quintessentia_1.html)
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To: central_va

Not if you don’t want
I have NO TV or internet at the house Just phones
My kids are soooo much better off its incredible how much ch


12 posted on 03/22/2018 8:47:55 AM PDT by Truthoverpower (The guvmint you get is the Trump winning express !)
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To: Liz; ransomnote; Whenifhow; null and void; aragorn; EnigmaticAnomaly; kalee; Kale; ...

p


13 posted on 03/22/2018 8:51:48 AM PDT by bitt (The first to squeal gets the best deal.)
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To: Kaslin

“Add to that the confession by a former campaign staffer that they basically took whatever they wanted from Facebook, with their blessing, and you begin to think there might be double standards at work here.”


No, there might be a HUGE illegal campaign contribution. I think that the FEC needs to get involved.

_____________________________
“Would anyone have signed up for Facebook if it were $50 a year but there were no ads? Maybe, but only a fraction of what they currently have. Just like people wouldn’t use gmail if they had to pay for it. But those “free” services have to be paid for somehow. The piper doesn’t play for free.”

If you aren’t paying for a product, then YOU are the product. People not aware of that (even if not in so many words) probably shouldn’t be allowed to vote.


14 posted on 03/22/2018 8:58:37 AM PDT by Ancesthntr ("The right to buy weapons is the right to be free." A. E. van Vogt)
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To: Kaslin

When we see the reality of how the present differs so much from what anyone expected just a generation or two ago it illustrates the true insanity
of the Climate Change mongers who are making predictions of impending doom and gloom 50, 100 and 200 years into the future.

Just 40 years ago the ‘experts” predicted that we were on the threshold of a new mini-ice age.

And only 12 years ago Al Gore predicted that by 2010 much of the eastern US would be under water.

Yet here we are 8 years past his deadline with dry feet and still breathing air.

If the past tells us anything it is that the direction the future will take us is uncertain and impossible to predict with any degree of accuracy.


15 posted on 03/22/2018 9:03:33 AM PDT by Iron Munro (If Illegals voted Republican 66 Million Democrats Would Be Screaming "Build The Wall!")
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To: Kaslin

Autonomous Vehicles = Titanic Technology


16 posted on 03/22/2018 9:04:08 AM PDT by infool7 (Observe, Orient, Pray, Decide, Act!(it's an OOPDA loop))
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To: rjsimmon

I totally agree.


17 posted on 03/22/2018 9:31:26 AM PDT by RipSawyer
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To: Liz

Double Standards = Karma Ensues

The left are real slow at learning it’s not the 1930’s guys.


18 posted on 03/22/2018 10:06:22 AM PDT by Vaduz (women and children to be impacIQ of chimpsted the most.)
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To: Iron Munro

And let’s not forget the demented Halfrican’s legacy of putting men in little girls bathrooms.


19 posted on 03/22/2018 10:12:32 AM PDT by Liz ((Our side has 8 trillion bullets;the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.))
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To: All
Desperate Zuckerberg's now saying (as his company flounders):
"we have a responsibility to protect users' information."

MEMO TO ZUCKER: That's what you SAY, you leftist idiot. But we all know what you DID.

20 posted on 03/22/2018 10:19:05 AM PDT by Liz ((Our side has 8 trillion bullets;the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.))
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