Categories: Technology

Technology’s impact on society reflects society’s impact on technology

Op-ed

Technology’s impact on society is forging two paths simultaneously. Tech companies tell us they are taking us down the road to convenience, but the price of convenience takes you and I down another.

On the go? Can’t see too well? Don’t feel like reading? Listen to the author read this article below.

Technology's impact on society reflects society's impact on technology audio

I have never owned a smartphone, yet I have been the editor of a technology news blog for four years.

I don’t shop online. I hate banner ads, sponsored posts, and algorithmic suggestions on what information I should consume, and yet I contribute to the very things I despise online.

Why is this?

I couldn’t care less about the latest mobile devices, their upgrades, their downgrades, whether they have a headphone jack or not.

What I care about is how will this technology affect me and in what little-known ways do tech companies benefit from my using their technology.

I take this philosophy on technology to The Sociable, and I have made it our mission to dissect the relationship between technology and society.

We may question, ‘What is technology’s impact on society?’ but to answer that, all we have to do is look in the mirror.

I live in the mountains outside of Medellin, Colombia, so I rarely visit my native United States of America, but I recently returned from a trip to where I spent my childhood — in the Adirondack mountains of New York — and what I learned from listening to my fellow Americans around the campfires has strengthened what I always intuited.

When it comes to technology, the people I spoke with only cared about how much money it would cost them and how it would make their lives more convenient.

Privacy was not a major concern among the campfire control group, whose main focus was on the price of Costco-bought rum and what songs to play next on the guitar.

I asked one of my fellow compatriots around the fire if he had ever owned a Samsung smart TV. He said he had one in his cabin.

I then asked if he was aware that the CIA and MI5 had listened-in to people’s conversations, and that they could do so even when the microphone appeared to be off, and that they even have a user’s guide that is publicly available thanks to WikiLeaks.

Read More: MI5, CIA used Samsung Smart TVs to secretly listen-in on conversations: WikiLeaks

His answer, at midnight, after copious cups of rum, was one of outrage, but he wasn’t surprised in the least.

I think that sentiment holds true for many citizens of the world.

Of course we don’t want people spying on us, obviously without our consent, but because our technology is so convenient, we as a society are willfully giving up our privacy and freedom, and we are in an abusive relationship with the companies that provide us with their convenient technologies.

I am contributing to the problem, and I believe that we have become a type of Stockholm Syndrome Society when it comes to technology.

Facebook, for example, has abused our trust over and over again, and yet I still have an open Facebook account because that’s where my friends and family are, and because I live so far away from them, it’s the most convenient way for me to keep in contact.

Read More: Are you really buying Facebook’s privacy-focused vision? Op-ed

I am contributing to the problem, and I believe that we have become a type of Stockholm Syndrome Society when it comes to technology.

As I write, Dr. Robert Epstein is giving a live interview on how Google’s alleged bias can manipulate voters by altering search results, yet I rely on Google for many, many things.

We may question, “What is technology’s impact on society?” but to answer that, all we have to do is look in the mirror.

What will be society’s impact on technology?

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

Recent Posts

WEF founder launches ‘Schwab Academy’ to guide humanity through the ‘Intelligent Age’

At the age of 87 World Economic Forum (WEF) founder Klaus Schwab finds a new…

4 days ago

From Pilots to Practice. What Healthcare Professionals Say About AI.

AI is quickly becoming part of the healthcare toolkit. It’s reshaping how care is delivered,…

5 days ago

Latin America to host conference on AI and Industrial Innovation 

Latin America is set to welcome leading professionals of the industrial maintenance sector to the…

6 days ago

Immigrants power over half of U.S. unicorns- now they have their own summit 

Immigrants in the U.S. are behind 55% of unicorn startups- valued at $1 billion USD…

1 week ago

Alternative App Stores Are Opening Up On iOS: Onside and Playgama Bring 300 Million Gamers to Europe’s iPhones

Europe’s digital landscape is entering into a new phase of openness. For the first time,…

1 week ago

The ‘DARPAVERSE’ is coming to model, simulate & optimize military operations

DARPA is metaphorically manifesting Eris, the Greek goddess of discord and strife, by attempting to…

2 weeks ago