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Privacy of Mind: The Last Civil Rights Battle
Trolling down the street in Manhattan, I suddenly hear a woman’s voice.“Who’s there? Who’s there?” she whispers. I look around but can’t figure out where it’s coming from. It seems to emanate from inside my skull.
Was I going nuts? Nope. I had simply encountered a new advertising medium: hypersonic sound. It broadcasts audio in a focused beam, so that only a person standing directly in its path hears the message. In this case, the cable channel A&E was using the technology to promote a show about, naturally, the paranormal.
I’m a geek, so my first reaction was, “Cool!” But it also felt creepy.
We think of our brains as the ultimate private sanctuary, a zone where other people can’t intrude without our knowledge or permission. But its boundaries are gradually eroding. Hypersonic sound is just a portent of what’s coming, one of a host of emerging technologies aimed at tapping into our heads. These tools raise a fascinating, and queasy, new ethical question: Do we have a right to “mental privacy”?
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April 10, 2008 at 11:57 am by moonwolf, 259 views, 2 comments
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moonwolf
North Vancouver, Canada






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Comments (2)
at 12:17 on April 10th, 2008
moonwolf, I like this story. It's good stuff. A fascinating and thought-provoking read! Thanks, moonwolf! "GS" and Best!
at 12:28 on April 10th, 2008
It's like in Minority Report: high-tech used to make everyday life less pleasant. I first read about this the other year and thought it was a hoax, but, alas, it's all too real...