the lie of privacy

Re: this New York Times article and this blog entry

It’s like people don’t understand the nature of information or human nature.

People who are upset when they find out they have been mentioned in someone’s blog, people who ask not to be blogged about, people who censor themselves around people they know blog… they are upset by the lie of privacy.

The lie of privacy: There is no such thing as privacy.

Before there were blogs, people still talked about their lives and their friends and family and the people they met and the things they did … blogging did not invent this phenomenon. If you do something publicly, if you say something and are not the only one to hear it, if you go someplace or behave some way or whatever… if it is not just you and six solid, sound-proof walls, then someone else knows about it. And if someone else knows about it, they’re going to tell someone. Maybe a lot of someones. A secret is something you tell someone else, and we’re not just talking about secrets here, we’re talking about everyday events and experiences. We’re talking about things overheard on mobile phone conversations or at bars, we’re talking about all the details of our latest hook-up or break-up, and because we’re talking about it, it’s not private.

Especially in this information age where most street corners, most businesses, inside and out and in the bathrooms have cameras and recording devices to monitor everything, there is no such thing as privacy. When someone from up to a couple of miles away with a laser-based listening device and a line of sight to any outside surface of a building you’re in can hear everything going on inside, when people with IR and EMI-based systems can literally see through walls, there is no such thing as privacy. If someone WANTS to find something out, they can, no matter how well you hide it. And don’t even pretend to think anything you do online is private. Every packet of information that finds its way to your computer, whether part of an email or a blog or a pornographic image has bounced of at least half a dozen computers before even getting to your ISP, and it left your computer’s ID at every stop.

This isn’t about becoming paranoid – that doesn’t do you much good. This is about realizing that privacy is and has always been a lie. Without fancy equipment or server logs or anything else, people have always been able to find out what they wanted to know about you by asking the people who know you, who saw you, who heard about you from the people who were there or who you told about it, thinking they wouldn’t spread the information. If you ever thought you were keeping a secret from someone, you either weren’t at all, or they never cared to know.

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This isn’t just about the lie of privacy. This is about the people who get upset when they glimpse that privacy is a lie. Because if it upsets you that other people know what you’ve been doing or saying, or about the places you’ve been going or who you’ve been going there with, the problem isn’t that people are finding out, it’s that you don’t think you should have been doing or saying or going or being with. You are upset with your own actions. You are ashamed or embarrassed of your own behavior.

If you believed that what you’d done was acceptable and reasonable, you would be either apathetic or proud when other people found out about it, not outraged or worried. If you made a mistake, the retelling of it is going to come across that way and as long as you are aware and comfortable with the fact that you are a human being and sometimes make mistakes, what is there to be upset or embarrassed about?

I recently accidentally walked into the women’s restroom at a restaruant, but I noticed it right away and went to the correct restroom. Some people would think that was something to be embarrassed about, but it seems like a simple mistake to me, so it didn’t occurr to me to even mention it here until just now when trying to think of mistakes I’d recently made that might be considered embarrassing.

So if people live by their own sense of how they should live and only do things that they themselves accept as reasonable, if people accept themselves as human and fallible, what is the problem with other people speaking or writing or publishing things about them?

And if people don’t live by their own sense of what is right, maybe getting upset seeing the things they don’t even like about themselves made public will drive them to lead their lives differently (or conversely, to change their beliefs about what one ought to do). Maybe becoming embarrassed when people post about their making mistakes will lead people to accept themselves as fallible humans beings.

Maybe I’m dreaming.

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In the article they say rightly that some people blog specifically for the attention they receive. Why do I blog? Perhaps to some extent for the attention, but more and more it seems to be part of an effort some people have trouble accepting. That is, I blog about everything that’s going on with me so I don’t have to tell the same stories again and again and again. I blog so that everyone who cares about me, my family and friends and the hundreds of strangers who keep coming back every day, knows what’s been going on with me and don’t have to ask. When I talk to someone on the phone or in IM or in person (occassionally) and they ask me what’s been going on, I don’t even bother saying the things I’ve already posted – I only bother to explain the things I haven’t already posted about, most of the time.

And I’ve found that I’ve begun to judge people’s opinions of me by this. There are people who I know are online all the time, but when they talk to me they have no idea what’s been going on in my life and sometimes have forgotten than I even have a blog. I seem automatically to feel that these people don’t consider me worth their time or energy. That they don’t really want to know how I am or what I’ve been up to, or they’d read FYTH at least occassionally. There are other people who seem to know what I’ve posted almost before I’ve posted it, or who call me up to comment on something I’d posted that day, or who ask me questions in reference to things I’d forgotten I’d posted about already… and these people I seem automatically to beleive care about me, are interested in me and my well-being on a daily basis.

The first group of people I tend to treat the same way; like they aren’t worth more than a passing effort, that I don’t care whether they are my friends or not. The second group I tend to value very highly, I treat them with respect and care and I do what I can to keep as in touch with their goings-on as they do in mine. And the third group (no, I didn’t mention them yet) aren’t ‘online people’, so the fact that they don’t read my blog doesn’t bother me at all. I treat them as though my blog didn’t exist because for them it doesn’t.

Regardless, I treat everyone knowing full well that there is no such thing as privacy, that if people want to know something about me they’ll find it out, and I try to remain as open and honest as possible. In everyday conversations I don’t just go blurting out things I know certain groups are sensitive to, but if someone asks, I don’t hesitate to answer. I do whatever I can to live my life the way I believe it ought to be lived, and do not worry about what other people may say about me, online or behind my back or wherever else.

(*I was thinking today about how I’d live my life and what I’d like to do if I found a gold mine or won the lottery or some other way came by a large sum of money. I immediately thought I’d live my life as I was now, and a moment later thought ‘except I’d pay off my debt and stay out of debt’. The small modifications I could find in my lifestyle were small things like talking to Sara more or buying more art supplies. It only now occurrs to me that I might use the money to physically visit Sara… but regardless, I’m not dreaming of big houses and fast cars and shiny boats. I’m living my life very close to my dream.*)

Getting close to the end of the week

Yes, a week is too long. I arrived on Monday. There was already palpable tension on Tuesday (though I am certain my own perception of that was skewed by my migraine). There was dissention on Wednesday that luckily did not interfere too much with the enjoyment of the actual Matrix premier. There was actual fighting and shouting today. I should be gone tomorrow before there are a critical mass of family present, if everything goes as I expect it will, but there may still be some intense friction and minor scuffles.

Except for those I saw The Matrix Reloaded with, none of the friends I tried to make plans with this entire week were seen, and most barely even spoken to. I kept getting voicemail, or worse – noncommittal answers from people I had been looking forward to seeing, to spending some time with. And then so few posts on the site… no email… nothing to look forward to going out to the whole week besides that one movie, nothing to look forward to coming back to besides escalating tension.

I don’t know. I was thinking about it, and there are at least as many residents and businesses within half a square mile of where my father’s house is in Phoenix and the entire population and businesses of Pine, AZ. Which is insanely different. I casually walk across Highway 87 and back in the middle of the day to get to the post office in Pine. There isn’t a stop sign or a red light or a crosswalk, and there doesn’t need to be. Here, about as close as Highway 87 is to my home in Pine is Bell Road. Crossing in the crosswalk with a WALK signal, day or even during the ‘quiet’ time of the night, you are likely to be putting your life at risk. To think of crossing illegally is only marginally more dangerous, but to reach that level of danger in Pine I’d have to stick my arm in a thresher or something. It’s just completely different.

So, I did manage to see The Matrix Reloaded twice, which was my design. I did manage to get out and buy a copy of Enter The Matrix, and unless something goes catastrophically wrong will be taking it and the XBox back to Pine with me tomorrow. I also managed to find a used copy of Joe Versus the Volcano on DVD, so I’m taking that of my ‘I Want’ list. We did that pysical meeting of the MEVBC, and I took a few photos but then Zoe managed to steal the camera and the copy of the book in question that Heath STILL hasn’t finished reading. I hope to get that back from him before I leave tomorrow if possible. I somehow failed to call him about it today. I didn’t get to a proper art supplies store, so we’ll see what direction my paintings take without the media I was hoping to work with. I have enough AOL CDs (thanks to Angela) to finally begin work on that project, and depending on how busy I am and how progress goes (and whether I get the camera back from Zoe), I may keep you updated with progress on it.

There’s something about one AM that makes the clocks around here tick louder. I’m going to go have another drink of water, maybe take another few ibuprofin for my aching knee, and go sleep on the couch again. Tomorrow night, back in the bed again. I’d like to look forward to staying in Pine as long as possible. Perhaps until I go to Vegas for Art’s wedding next month. I don’t know. Are more movies coming out that I can’t live without? I feel (this minute) as though a feeling of apathy about most of the summer movies has come over me. Maybe the Hulk… Probably 28 Days Later, but … what else? I can’t even remember right now…

The Matrix Reloaded – movie review – No Spoilers, Really!

Okay, seriously. I’m going to write this review and do my best not to spoil anything. Then I’m going to go back through and re-read it and be sure I haven’t spoiled anything. If you still think I’m going to spoil something, go see the movie right away. And be sure to sit through the credits.

Okay, so a very important thing to keep in mind about this movie is that it is part two of a three part series. This movie is not intended to stand on it’s own as a movie. I have very recently read many reviews of The Matrix Reloaded (which I will call M2 from here on for convenience), and many high-falutin’ critics have said that it isn’t as good as the original, that it doesn’t pack the same wallop, that it doesn’t stand alone as a ‘great’ film. M2 is not intended to stand alone. If M2 packed the same wallop as the first one, these same reviewers would simply say it was regurgitating the first movie. As far as whether or not it is ‘as good’ as The Matrix (M1), I believe that would take repeat viewings that these reviewers have not yet had.

Which I have also not yet had. I will be seeing it again tomorrow night, and may write another review, or another section of review, or perhaps a complete, spoilers-intact version of a review afterwards. There are things about this movie that give its philosophy strength that are not as obvious as the philosophical construct of M1 – a philosophy that has spawned three books already. The character who dispenses the most important philosophical information in this film even goes so far as to state that most of what he will say will not be understood right away. I won’t reveal any details here, but watch for it, pay attention, and try to remember what transpires; when what he says bears fruit in The Matrix Revolutions (M3) this fall, you’ll be glad you did.

The real star of this movie, for most of the people who see it, will be the action sequences. The important ‘talking’ breaks in between the action will seem verging on the un-necessary as action fans wait with bated breath for the next blow – obvious like the psychological/philosophical one in M1 or physical like the bulk of them in M2. Luckily, the slower ‘talking’ scenes are not close to the energy-drain that similar exposition and character development became for Episode II, and after a while the action sequences begin coming so close together it felt to me as though too much dialogue and exposition had been cut out to bring the running time down and the pace up.

In M2, the cast of characters is as broadly expanded as the mythology is deepend in detail. We meet all range of characters who reside in and out of The Matrix and we learn new things about the ones we are familiar with. We learn how The Matrix’s mythology explains all range of anomalies in the world we know, and we get a glimpse of what lies even further ‘down the rabbit hole’. We also spend plenty of time looking around in the physical rabbit-hole of the buried city of Zion. Many of the new faces are only on screen briefly, but promise to be more important in the drama in M3 that most of M2 is simply setting up. Much as you need to have seen M1 to understand M2 (they do not explain what The Matrix is, what Zion is, where Zion is, who the enemy is, who lived and died and how in M1, any of it, in M2), you will be lost in M3 if you have not seen M2. And from what has been set up (and what I know is coming) I know you will not want to miss a thing in M3.

You wanna hear ‘is the CGI is good?’ It’s better than anything you’ve seen before. They invented a new way of simulating and recreating objects and people that allowed them to do things no conventional crew could have done with the biggest budget. You wanna hear ‘are the fights fast-paced and exciting?’ Some of the fights are so fast-paced and intricate that I lost track and couldn’t follow what was going on. There are slick moves and turns of fate that brought my audience to cheers and whoops during harried hand-to-hand combat. You wanna hear ‘will it blow my mind?’ Well, truthfully, you’ll have to think harder, pay closer attention, and maybe think quite a bit outside ‘the box’ to be blown away by M2 in the way M1 blew your mind. But maybe it all becomes painfully clear in M3. And anyway, the scale and pace of the action of so much of M2 should be enough to blow your mind!

Overall, I would say it is a very good movie, and recommend you watch it. There are some weak points – some action sequences that seem like they could have been avoided easily instead of provoked and increased in scale, some slower sections of dialogue, politics, and character development. But mostly the dialogue, politics, and character development help create a more rich, detailed, well-developed world. And even the apparently needless action makes sense when taken as character development. (You’ll have to see it and think about it; I’ll not explain it here.) Look for the character that The Wachowski’s wrote for Sean Connery (which he turned down) and then try not to think of how different the movies would have been with him there.

Oh yeah, and the cliffhanger ending. In case you don’t know, and this still doesn’t give anything away, this movie ends with a cliffhanger. There is much action and drama that is built towards throughout M2 that would simply have immediately occurred, were movies allowed to be 5+ hours long. The film stops abruptly after a lot of ‘twist’ information is revealed, and you are left facing a six-month intermission. I figured it was important to include that information in the non-spoiler review, since people who haven’t already decided to see it might want to wait until they have less wait between pictures. I don’t want to discourage you from going to see it, but I want you to know that that anticipation any hype that’s been building for the last four years will only intensify by your seeing this movie.

And soon, my time for bed.

The Matrix Reloaded

So, yeah. So, there was sone tension in the house, but my migraine had finally mostly dissipated after all day and a couple of hours napping (all I was good for, really), so I wanted to get out for a bit. I needed to get across the street and buy tickets to tomorrow night’s The Matrix Reloaded for Art and Callie and Zoe, and it’s about 15 minutes each way walking, so I figured a half hour or more outside would be nice…

As I walked, I thought about stopping at the various places where I could purchase alcohol on the way back, or the local bars I might be able to stop at for an overpriced drink or two… but then as I approached the theatre, one of my extra senses went off, and I knew there was a screening of some kind. I asked someone who I knew would know, ‘how can I get in on this?’ to which they, being part of the people in charge, told me it was too late if I didn’t already have a pass. I purchased the tickets I needed and asked the guy what was screening (though I had a pretty good idea), and he confirmed it was The Matrix Reloaded.

I began listening and watching, learning the players, the theatre staff, the event staff, the door person who was covering for the regular door person on their break. I watched every person approaching the theatre carefully, locating their passes and counting them instantly to determine whether they held more than one. Anyone who had more than one, I asked for an extra. The line was getting longer. Soon I knew that there were 280 seats in the theatre, only 258 of them for the public, and that the Cadillac dealership (this screening’s sponsor) had given out 900 passes. And I could see that the line was getting longer. It was still about two hours before the screening was scheduled to begin, but the line was over 100 people long.

After about half an hour of this, I saw a young woman holding a pass, walking out as though to leave entirely. After she walked out the front doors, I asked her if she had an extra pass, and she said yes. I followed her back out into the parking lot, where she met four of her friends. She handed them all passes and me another. I was in. As we walked back in the direction of the theatre, I realized I had one and handed her a pass for a free popcorn. She would have been happy to get nothing, but I thought it was a nice gesture.

I followed her and her friends to the place in line she had been at before, only about 45 people from the front of the line, and after a few moments I called home to let my father know why I wouldn’t be right back. I had a couple of hours to wait for the movie, and then the 138 minute movie. Oh, and to ask one of them to come to the theatre with a Harkins cup, entitling me to $1 drinks.

After a time, my brother called me back and asked if I thought I could get him in, and to let me know he would be there after supper, in about half an hour. I told him that several times more passes had been given out than seats were available, and that passes were for one person each, but that he could try the same thing I had and see if he could get in. He showed up in under 20 minutes with the cup, and I explained again (this time in person, so with less background noise, which is the death knell of cellphone calls) that he’d just have to ask around and see if anyone had extra. While he was asking, I talked to the doorman, who had several ‘extra’ passes, whether he could spare any – he said he was holding them for specific people. See, some people who show up early leave their friends’ passes at the door with their name instead of risking getting out of line to hand it over. We were both friendly and understanding about it, but he couldn’t give Heath one.

I went and got my drink and headed back to the line, watching to see if Heath made it back with a pass. I saw him out the doors with his phone to his head, probably trying to call me again as he had when he first arrived with the cup, but my phone didn’t ring. I stepped out of the line again and waved him in and he didn’t see me. I couldn’t see if he had a pass, or was saying he didn’t, but finally my phone rang and I told him to come inside. He had a pass! Apparently there was someone at the end of the line, way around the corner, with an envelope full of them, glad to give them out. We returned to our place in line.

Around 25 minutes after all that, they started loading us into the theatre. They searched everyone for electronic devices and checked everyone’s phones at the door for cameras as well. No recordings allowed, of course. Fine with me, my mind records fine. I just want to experience the movie, and yeah, I want other people to see it, too… but go pay for it, people! It’s worth seeing on a screen much bigger than your computer screen or your TV screen.

Oh, and yeah, when you go see it… sit through the entire end credits. I did, and not just because I do that out of habit, but because of something else I’d overheard while I was still playing the ‘get into a screening without prior knowledge’ game that turned out to be true. It’s all worth the wait. Trust me.

Oh, and maybe I’ll write a review to post tomorrow before anyone else sees it. Something that doesn’t give anything away. And there’s plenty to give away.