From 5b122aad2c392b06dfdb88ae486986221fa8bf44592143dbbdbced58c3feb74f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nicholas Johnson Date: Wed, 15 Feb 2023 00:00:00 +0000 Subject: Convert refs: mourning-the-loss-of-privacy --- content/entry/mourning-the-loss-of-privacy.md | 1 - 1 file changed, 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'content/entry') diff --git a/content/entry/mourning-the-loss-of-privacy.md b/content/entry/mourning-the-loss-of-privacy.md index 39608c1..f88923f 100644 --- a/content/entry/mourning-the-loss-of-privacy.md +++ b/content/entry/mourning-the-loss-of-privacy.md @@ -2,7 +2,6 @@ title: "Mourning the Loss of Privacy" date: 2021-05-06T00:00:00 draft: false -makerefs: false --- # Losing Privacy I mourn the loss of collective privacy in society year after year. Seeing people passively accept more mass surveillance and less privacy rather than fight back is disheartening. Especially young people. Young people just don't seem to care. They've given up on privacy. It's an old-fashioned idea for them. I'm obliged to qualify that with "some, not all" young people. Nonetheless I find it very troubling that it's hard to find young people with sane attitudes towards privacy. This isn't to exclude the older generations. A good number of older folks have been infected with the "nothing to hide" meme. They're not immune either. The reason I'm specifically worried about young people is because they define what is normal in society. I'm able to get most older people to agree with me that the loss of privacy is a bad thing. Young people are prone to disinterest in privacy and brushing off mass surveillance as "the way things are now". -- cgit v1.2.3