Coldplay kiss-cam flap proves we're our own surveillance state

theregister.com

21 points by rntn 9 hours ago


Permik - 7 hours ago

It's super strange that there's this huge gap of expectation of privacy and lack of social consequences when compared to the past.

Way back when villages and towns were hella smaller, unapproved behavior was nipped on the bud, because people talk and there were less people that you just couldn't disappear into the masses. There were _actual_ real social consequences.

_Technically_ we're just moving back to basics, but the social consequences of the increased awareness should apply to everyone – equally.

garciasn - 8 hours ago

There is no 'surveillance state' here. There were two people engaged in an apparent affair that were caught and people close to them were notified. These two having an affair is a big ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ and no one should care; however, being these two are the 1) CEO of a company and 2) the head of HR for that same company, the employees of said company, its shareholders (if any), and its board (if any) should be REALLY interested in this. And it has absolutely fucking nothing to do w/surveillance; this could have happened anywhere, at any time in history, with or without technology.

fred_is_fred - 7 hours ago

We may well be in a surveillance state but it’s not because of crowd cams at a Coldplay concert.

perilunar - 3 hours ago

Sousveillance, not surveillance.

- 8 hours ago
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