It's almost like Alps doesn't want people watching him take a dump or watching hard core on the web. How odd.![]()
Wikipedia said:Social features
"Social" was one of the five major principles discussed by Sony at the PlayStation 4 Meeting 2013.[41] Although the console will feature social functionality, the features are optional and can be disabled.[41]
The DualShock 4 controller includes a SHARE button.[12] Pressing this button allows the player to cycle through the last several minutes of gameplay to select a clip appropriate for sharing. Video can be uploaded directly from the console, either to websites or other PSN users.
Gamers will have the ability to use real names with friends, in addition to a moniker in other situations when anonymity is important.[46] They will also be able to stream video of their games live via services such as Ustream, allowing friends to view and comment on them.[12]
...a bridge too far. Big brother gon' get you.But it won't be seen by random people, only people on your friends list or no one at all if you so choose.
I've only read 1984 and Brave New World, and it's been a while. Was that from either of those?
Heh, you joke, but I've argued with younger friends of mine and gotten strange reactions. If you're under twenty the idea that being data mined all the time is creepy just doesn't register at all in my experience.
We is set in the future. D-503 lives in the One State,[2] an urban nation constructed almost entirely of glass, which allows the secret police/spies to inform on and supervise the public more easily.
Like all other citizens of the One State, D-503 lives in a glass apartment building and is carefully watched by the secret police, or Bureau of Guardians.
I-330 invites him to visit the Ancient House, notable for being the only opaque building in the One State, except for windows.
Google Glass is like one camera car for each of the thousands, possibly millions, of people who will wear the device - every single day, everywhere they go - on sidewalks, into restaurants, up elevators, around your office, into your home. From now on, starting today, anywhere you go within range of a Google Glass device, everything you do could be recorded and uploaded to Google’s cloud, and stored there for the rest of your life. You won’t know if you’re being recorded or not; and even if you do, you’ll have no way to stop it.
That is disturbing. In many ways.
Personally, I though writing out a manifesto and mailing off pipe bombs is a more appropriate response to this infringement of privacy, but you obviously don't care about liberty.Okay, let's be clear. The initial implementation is fine ( if annoying ) except for the possibility that you won't be able to opt out of the "real name search." This basically means that, if you have a cyberstalker ( or even just frienemies you're avoiding, ) they will know your PSN name at will.
The second problem is that I don't trust them not to update the software and TOS to squeeze you into less strict privacy settings.
My solution is very practical: I'm just going to wait and see how it goes for a few years before I buy one. Simples.
Hobbs, come on. Don't be a dick to me man.
I'm not the f*cking unabomber just because I'm freaked out by all this. Just five or six years ago I felt like my life was mostly private and now I don't. Do I have to be full on crazy to find that disturbing?
EDIT: Ace99: See, that's what disturbs me. I suspect that the wealthy will have "surveillance free" gated communities and things like that. I do not believe the burden will fall equally. I think low and middle class people will be living in a goldfish bowl but the wealthy and powerful will be able to afford relief from the panopticon.
You don't see the significant downsides, though?
Look, I'm just not up for it. If there's an option to game anonymously that always what I'll choose. I understand what you're saying, I just don't want my real identity tied to my gaming any more than absolutely necessary. It's not even so I can flame or something like that, it's a question of comfort for me and it's not negotiable.
EDIT: And Microsoft technically having access to your name and every person you've ever known in your entire life being able to easily know you spent 4 hours playing God of War on Saturday are not the same, downtown, and I think you'll have to concede that point.