How everything you do is being monitored in an AI-fuelled 'surveillance capitalism system' that's ramping up aggressively

Personal data ranging from your health information to your location is being hoovered up by the government.

a photo of an eye looking through a keyhole
The U.S. government is using AI to speed analysis of government and commercial data about you.
(Image credit: Andriano_cz via Getty Images)

On a Saturday morning, you head to the hardware store. Your neighbors' Ring cameras film your walk to the car. Your car's sensors, cameras and microphones record your speed, how you drive, where you're going, who's with you, what you say, and biological metrics such as facial expression, weight and heart rate. Your car may also collect text messages and contacts from your connected smartphone.

Meanwhile, your phone continuously senses and records your communications, info about your health, what apps you're using, and tracks your location via cell towers, GPS satellites and Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.

Anne Toomey McKenna
Affiliated Faculty Member, Institute for Computational and Data Sciences, Penn State

Anne Toomey McKenna (she/her) is a licensed attorney, researcher, and Law Professor working for over two decades at the interdisciplinary intersection of technology, privacy, and law. Professor McKenna is currently an Affiliated Faculty with Penn State University’s Institute for Computational & Data Sciences and was formerly Penn State Dickinson Law’s Distinguished Scholar of Cyber Law & Policy before moving to Richmond for family. Professor McKenna sits on the Advisory Board and serves as Support Chair of the AI Policy Committee for the world’s largest technical professional organization, the Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and Co-Chairs IEEE’s Privacy, Equity, and Justice in AI Subcommittee.

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