6 Matching Annotations
  1. Dec 2024
    1. In Russia, Putin's regime has created a system called SORM, which is installed at each and every internet  service provider; and it allows them to surveil what information each and every citizen spreads through the internet.

      Russia's "System for Operative Investigative Activities"

      "SORM." Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 1 Dec. 2024, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SORM. Accessed 2 Dec. 2024.

  2. Dec 2022
  3. May 2022
    1. We've had three things happen simultaneously: we've moved from an open web where people start lots of small projects to one where it really feels like if you're not on a Facebook or a YouTube, you're not going to reach a billion users, and at that point, why is it worth doing this? Second, we've developed a financial model of surveillance capitalism, where the default model for all of these tools is we're going to collect as much information as we can about you and monetize your attention. Then we've developed a model for financing these, which is venture capital, where we basically say it is your job to grow as quickly as possible, to get to the point where you have a near monopoly on a space and you can charge monopoly rents. Get rid of two aspects of that equation and things are quite different.

      How We Got Here: Concentration of Reach, Surveillance Capitalism, and Venture Capital

      These three things combined drove the internet's trajectory. Without these three components, we wouldn't have seen the concentration of private social spaces and the problems that came with them.

  4. Feb 2021
  5. Mar 2020
    1. And if people were really cool about sharing their personal and private information with anyone, and totally fine about being tracked everywhere they go and having a record kept of all the people they know and have relationships with, why would the ad tech industry need to spy on them in the first place? They could just ask up front for all your passwords.
  6. Dec 2019