09 Jan 2010 @ 9:13 PM 

I’m self-conscious enough without CNN reporting this morning that Microsoft is working on a new personal surveillance system called “SenseCam,” which will serve as your own personal voyeur — essentially recording everything that you see and do, every minute, all day.
Do you remember when Google started developing Google Maps and people starting calling local police departments to tell them about strange cars from the future with UFO-like pods (which we all later found out, was the actual GPS mapping thing) on their roofs? Well, keep that iPhone in its holster on your way to work this morning…Microsoft Beta testers are actually walking around cities across America today with audio and video equipment strapped to their heads. Human droids.

Of course, today’s technology creates opportunities for moment-by-moment documentation. But does that mean we really should? More importantly, what does that mean for the future of affordable healthcare when, say, your electronic diary goes viral in the cloud and your insurance carrier watches you smoking a cigarette? Do our health insurance quotes go up?

Microsoft claims the benefits of the system outweigh the inherent risks to personal privacy. Archives of your blog, Facebook or Twitter feed — both in text and in pictures – would help you remember exactly what you ate on important occasions, the papers you were proud of and the outfits you wore. For sure, such a tool would be a helpful aid for people suffering the horrors of Alzheimer’s Disease or other memory-related ailments.

Come to think of it (pardon the obvious pun), I could use a device like this to help me remember my log-ins, my parking spot and on some days, my name. But not at the personal risk or embarrassment of snickering pedestrians the moment I’m caught strapping on a bulbous helmet-cam and wire harness.

So how many Gigs does your brain have?

 

To most people, health insurance is a plastic card with numbers that lets you into the doctor?s office, and a little booklet of paper that lives in your filing cabinet, closet or some dusty corner of your home. To Michael, health insurance and the historical reforms that go along with the inequality of healthcare in America are topics of healthy discussion, worthy of further study and catalysts for education and action.

Posted By: admin
Last Edit: 09 Jan 2010 @ 09:13 PM

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