No need for hate, you have an opinion and stated why. This is a place for reasoned discussion, not knee-jerk hysterics.
I argue most people who don't like it are doing stuff they don't want to be caught doing, even if it's not breaking the law.
What about people who just value their privacy? Or is that something to be suspicious of now?
But fuck you, don't do weird shit.
I suppose we should all just get busy being the same then, yes? It seems that your opinion doesn't just cover what you want, it also imposes things on other people that they might not want. Hardly a fair system.
And before people bitch about being seen naked, that's what AI would be for.
I think I can argue the case for privacy a bit more elegantly than simply not wishing to be seen naked (I presume you are referring to the 'curtains' argument here).
Personally speaking I don't trust 'the system'. Mainly because I have no control of it and have no ability to audit it and whether it is doing what it's supposed to or being abused.
the only thing we need is a system to regulate for abuse. Any system that watches over another system needs to be very strict.
And therein lies the rub. Power is power, and until you can assure me that anyone who is elevated to a position of power is either a) unable to abuse it or b) is of good enough character to not abuse it without oversight, then I simply don't trust it.
There is no moral obligation on me to trust someone else having power over me other than God.
I accept that this approach reduces the opportunity for technology to 'make me safer'. However, since all evidence is to the contrary I think I am making a safe bet at this point in time.
No need for hate, you have an opinion and stated why. This is a place for reasoned discussion, not knee-jerk hysterics.
What about people who just value their privacy? Or is that something to be suspicious of now?
I suppose we should all just get busy being the same then, yes? It seems that your opinion doesn't just cover what you want, it also imposes things on other people that they might not want. Hardly a fair system.
I think I can argue the case for privacy a bit more elegantly than simply not wishing to be seen naked (I presume you are referring to the 'curtains' argument here).
Personally speaking I don't trust 'the system'. Mainly because I have no control of it and have no ability to audit it and whether it is doing what it's supposed to or being abused.
And therein lies the rub. Power is power, and until you can assure me that anyone who is elevated to a position of power is either a) unable to abuse it or b) is of good enough character to not abuse it without oversight, then I simply don't trust it.
There is no moral obligation on me to trust someone else having power over me other than God.
I accept that this approach reduces the opportunity for technology to 'make me safer'. However, since all evidence is to the contrary I think I am making a safe bet at this point in time.