Topic: Keeper |
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41. Author: DBP Date: Wed 8th Oct 2025. 06:17 What about balaclava to hide identity, but for privacy and not to commit a crime? Can imagine a time in the not too distant Labour future where you might be looking to guide your identity simply because you do not want to have your movements tracked by councils / governments / police / etc employing facial recognition to cctv and cameras/Facebook glasses/etc (soon to be linked to your Brit card), not wanting some AI taking image and video databases to start scanning where you’ve been? when you went there? What you were doing? who you were with? who else happened to be in the area? what other things happened to go on when you were there? Imagine a time when all of that, along with your Internet usage, online purchases, social media posts, work details, banking details etc are all brought together and monitored - instantly available, flagged and summarised to authorities Technology is already there and currently trying to be brought together - so could genuinely see myself happily wearing balaclavas or other facial recognition spoilers for privacy Post Edited (Wed 08 Oct 06:24) Reply |
42. Author: thebear Date: Wed 8th Oct 2025. 17:40 Don’t actually care, I don’t break the law, waste your time and track me if you want, but overall you don’t because you know my lifestyle. But if I did break the law, I don’t want to be seen, so wear balaclavas. And because of that they rightly so get tracked Reply |
43. Author: kelty_par Date: Wed 8th Oct 2025. 18:30 Genuine question, DPB - if you aren`t committing a crime, why does it matter that someone knows you walked down a particular street at a particular time? I couldn`t give a shiny ***** that this information could be used by the police or government. If anything, if it helps prove I wasn`t committing a crime I`d be happy with that. My phone, my bank card, my loyalty cards, my season ticket can all be used to say where I am, so the rest is irrelevant IMO. Different scenario to someone who is being stalked/targeted by someone but a) that is highly unlikely to be the authorities and b) determined folk can work that stuff out already. We`ve already got parents of folk in Fife schools refusing to take an iPad because "they (unknown) will use it to listen to me at home". Paranoid delusion isn`t healthy. MI5 couldn`t care one jot whether you watch The Chase or not, or which porn you use (as long as it`s not illegal) or who you have over to the house when the missus is at work. Anyway, Terrell looks good to me. Ayr was unlucky as stated above, the only criticism is that he let it past him at the near post but then he almost covered it exactly as it hit the woodwork. The second Ayr goal moved like a beachball in a stiff breeze. Swerved one way then `tother. Liked his distribution on Saturday and looked confident. Reply |
44. Author: Indiapar1 Date: Wed 8th Oct 2025. 18:33 He looked more assured in goal. Mistakes will happen with young keepers. All part of the learning experience G Wardrope Reply |