A peek behind the scenes of the modern surveillance state
Journeyman Pictures' short documentary "Naked Citizens" is an absolutely
terrifying and amazing must-see glimpse of the modern security state,
and the ways in which it automatically ascribes guilt to people based on
algorithmic inferences, and, having done so, conducts such far-reaching
surveillance into its victims' lives that the lack of anything
incriminating is treated of proof of being a criminal mastermind:
"I woke up to pounding on my door", says Andrej Holm, a sociologist from
the Humboldt University. In what felt like a scene from a movie, he was
taken from his Berlin home by armed men after a systematic monitoring
of his academic research deemed him the probable leader of a militant
group. After 30 days in solitary confinement, he was released without
charges. Across Western Europe and the USA, surveillance of civilians
has become a major business. With one camera for every 14 people in
London and drones being used by police to track individuals, the threat
of living in a Big Brother state is becoming a reality. At an annual
conference of hackers, keynote speaker Jacob Appelbaum asserts, "to be
free of suspicion is the most important right to be truly free". But
with most people having a limited understanding of this world of cyber
surveillance and how to protect ourselves, are our basic freedoms
already being lost?
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