Summary Of Rebecca Solnit's Easy Chair

Decent Essays
In Rebecca Solnit’s article, “Easy Chair” I realized that we do not have privacy at all if we use the technology and take care of our things online on the Internet. The article Poison Apple made me realize that we do not have privacy at all if we use technology. For example, Rebecca Solnit mentioned, “Google is the world’s biggest advertising company, watching you on nearly every website you visit’’ (Solnit 5). This passage demonstrates how technology has been part of everyday human's life. Google knows everything about everyone’s interests and it can share this information with its partnerships and use it for their benefits. Moreover, Facebook is another social media that is spying on us and works for the government. In fact, we are under

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Its a well known fact that technology is becoming more embodied in our lives. The Pew Internet and American Life Project released a study stating the number of adults that own cellphones, laptops or tablets is rising. This increase in ownership of technology has revolutionized access to information through the internet. One notable case is O’Grady v. Superior Court of Santa Clara County (2006). Apple filed a case against an unnamed individual who allegedly leaked information on several online sites regarding new Apple products.…

    • 315 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Lee Humphreys: A Summary

    • 260 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Lee Humphreys draws on his research as an analyst to explore issues of privacy and surveillance with the advent of the iPhone and other ‘smartphones’. Humphreys suggests the use of new information technologies leads to increased surveillance in a networked society. Using the case of Dodgeball, a mobile service that distributed location-based information of users, he categorizes surveillance that present in the everyday usage of Dodgeball into three different categories: voluntary panopticon, lateral surveillance, and self-surveillance. Humphreys checks many of his findings with the founder of Dodgeball, then he employs constant comparative method with an interpretive approach in order to understand the perspectives of the Dodgeball. Through…

    • 260 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Summary of Privacy by Chuck McCutcheon a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C. The controlling idea of the article is centralized around the invasion of privacy committed by the government, big corporations and hackers. The author uses the following statements to support his controlling idea. The author talks about the access government has to data, McCutcheon (2014) said: In leaks to The Washington Post and The Guardian newspaper in Britain, Snowden revealed that the NSA was using a program called PRISM to amass data on people across the globe, including their email, Facebook posts and instant messages. A separate program collected bulk customer phone records from U.S. phone service providers — specifically the numbers…

    • 305 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the article “The Internet is a surveillance state”, which appeared on CNN.com on March 16, 2013, Bruce Schneier claims the government can see our every move on the internet. He goes on to state, “Whether we admit it to ourselves or not, whether we like it or not, we’re being tracked at all times.” (55). He uses specific and persuasive examples from his work experience to share his thoughts and beliefs on a subject that not everyone is aware of, but the ones who do are usually chilled by it. This paper will analyze Schneier’s article from his view as an American security technologist, cryptologist, and author of “Liars and authors:…

    • 801 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The information that is required to sign up for both of these websites is invasive, and is definitely being used by the government to spy on its citizens. Social Security offices, Welfare agencies, and military recruiting facilities all investigate citizens through Facebook, linkedin, and other social media…

    • 523 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    As supported by Harris’s experiments, the loss of privacy that we perceive when we use the Internet occurs in part because, like Michael Foucault claims, being under constant surveillance in a panoptic environment causes people to constantly feel watched and in part because, like Saadi Lahlou claims, people are forced to reveal information and act in a setting in which they normally would…

    • 1183 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In Defense Of Distraction

    • 1246 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Authors Anderson, Goldberger, and Franzen address the audience about concerns within societies and the effect technology has disconnected the reality and everyday social lives of one another and how these distractions have invaded our privacy and the idea of it. They accomplish this argument by using sources with a variety of experts and interviews that give expertise to persuade the argument of technology and the distractions it creates among society’s ultimate connections and ideas of privacy. In this way Anderson, Goldberger, and Franzen convince the audience of the ultimate distraction technology creates in the attention society seems to diminish and invade the privacy we once had. In the essay “In Defense of Distraction” in Writing Analytically…

    • 1246 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Greyson Jennings 9 November 2014 Political Life To Be Advanced, Or To Be Free? Who would think that the technology of the future would also mean a person must sacrifice their privacy? In Dave Egger’s 2013 novel, The Circle is very advanced in technology, but because they are so advanced they overstepped their bounds and have now begun to intrude on personal privacy. Once a person begins work for The Circle their privacy is automatically given up. However, people do not notice it is such a big deal until later when it starts to affect other aspects of their life completely unrelated to The Circle.…

    • 1845 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the essay “Walking and the Suburbanized Psyche” by Rebecca Solnit, she believes walking was so valuable in the past because “walking was a sort of sacrament and a routine recreation”. People would walk frequently and voluntarily for their own pleasure like by making a date for a walk. Solnit narrates how “urban innovations such as sidewalks and sewers were improving cities” however it had “not yet menaced by twentieth-century speedups”. Solnit calls this period the, “golden age of walking” that initiated in the eighteenth century and she fears that it has “expired some decades ago”, yet its significance is the “creation of places to walk and its valuation of recreational walking”. Unfortunately, the development of suburbanization which…

    • 964 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the essay, “How Computers Change the Way We Think”, written by Sherry Turkle, begins by explaining her first experience on how PCs change the way we think. Turkle, a Professor of the Social Studies of Science and Technology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, talks about the move from slide guidelines to calculators and how it was troublesome for that move for college students. Turkle proceeds on and discusses how technology gives individuals another approach to consider knowing and understanding. Likewise, Turkle concentrates on privacy and how middle-school and high-school students have a tendency to give out personal information without any safeguard. In the essay, Turkle discusses some computer programs that are being created…

    • 709 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    With the advancement of technology comes a startling decrease in privacy. Nothing is considered ‘personal’ by the internet, or private, or kept a secret. Anything put on the internet is forever immortalized. Technology like cellphones, laptops, and drones have invaded the sense of personal privacy and eliminated the prospects of privacy returning to those who possess technology.…

    • 382 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In our daily lives, we relinquish some of our private information ignorantly. As human beings, many of us tend to simply hand out our information in exchange for other items or free services. Many times, online shopping offers better prices but at what cost? Sometimes, better prices means relinquishing your private information that could be obtained by anyone at anytime. In the article, The Convenience-Surveillance Tradeoff, the author makes compelling points on how our society is unaware of the repercussions that come with relinquishing our…

    • 1456 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Why Privacy Matters

    • 1428 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Assignment Submitted By Yours Name here Submitted To Yours Instructor Name here To Meet the Needs of the Course Nov., 2015. For this rhetorical analysis task, I have selected the article which is titles as Why Privacy Matters Even if You Have Nothing to Hide, written by Daniel J. Solove.…

    • 1428 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    As humans continue to crave convenience, large technological companies are starting to add features to make products easier to use. However, the consumers do not realize that in order for them to receive such large amounts of convenience, they are sacrificing their privacy. Some of Samsung’s new Smart Televisions ship off “...voice data to an unnamed third party—presumably for the purpose of translating the speech to text”(Newman). This perfectly illustrates how today’s latest technology is invading privacy, one step at a time. People who use the voice command feature on their television can accidentally say something that they should no tell others.…

    • 1601 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Today’s internet has become an integral part of our daily lives. It changed the world in so many positive ways, but it has also a negative side to it. The negative issues that we are facing today with internet are our online privacy and data breaches. Recently, many people were divided in terms of their strong views about the importance of privacy and the exchange “between security needs and personal privacy” (Rainie & Maniam, 2016) as millions of Americans were also affected by online threats and privacy breaches and at the same time concerned with our security. The focus has been on government monitoring, although there are some other significant issues and concerns about how industries use our data.…

    • 952 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays