It’s a logical conclusion of facial recognition and mass indexing existing that anywhere remotely public you put your face is just public.
I have less of a problem with that than the fact an illusion of privacy is created anyway. Now we have a whole part of our economy that exists because people don’t really understand it’s there.
nymnympseudonym@piefed.social 1 week ago
Light of Other Days
One of the plot points is that in response to panopticon-style surveillance, an underground counterculture emerges of people who become invisible – hiding under camo, blankets, etc. And never speaking; only using sign language directly touching another person’s hands to keep communication private.
CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org 1 week ago
Dope. This one is new to me…
nymnympseudonym@piefed.social 1 week ago
It’s the very best of Clarke’s work: when he lets a good writer do the storytelling, and sticks himself to figuring out the logical conclusion of new technology
RiQuY@lemmy.zip 1 week ago
How do you use sign language while you touch other people’s hands?
Radiant_sir_radiant@beehaw.org 1 week ago
I don’t know about other countries - in Switzerland there’s something called ‘tactile sign language’. It’s a variation of sign language where the ‘listener’ is holding your hands to track your movements, and it’s commonly used by/with people with impaired hearing and eyesight.
A more universal (and much easier to learn but much slower) variant is ‘lormen’ where you use your right hand to draw letters on the ‘listening’ person’s left hand. E.g. the word ‘hello’ would be: run finger down top half of pinkie, tap tip of index finger, run finger down middle finger to wrist (twice), tap tip of ring finger.
emergencycall@fedia.io 1 week ago
how people who are both blind and deaf communicate
SpikesOtherDog@ani.social 1 week ago
You can spell, but that would slow down conversation significantly. I get frustrated sometimes when people talk too slow, so I think I would just end up blurting it out.