The story about Edward Snowden and his leaks about NSA is an phenomenal perspective to this subject.
It is worth looking at Edward Snowdens alleged idealistic actions. Anyone who is being hired to work with classified information, must undertake in writing to professional secrecy and know the penalty for violating this. But he blew on confidence,that is assigned one when one is entrusted with the conduct of secret information as a protection for national security. Objectively, there can be no doubt Snowdens criminals continuing. Telecom companies logging of all citizens mobile, their mail correspondence and Internet searches are some of the less visible examples of the modern, disorganized surveillance society. But although large numbers provide anxious redolent of past abuse of personal data, there is little to suggest that the human being turns in outrage against the surveillance that follows our smallest steps and looking us all over the shoulders around the clock. On the contrary. Monitoring Optimism is now an aged fact. Visible and invisible surveillance is to make the individual more comfortable. The naive people we consist of today is an excellent basis for understanding why each individual so uncritically accepts increased monitoring. The conclusion is …show more content…
This makes clear that the concept of safety does not certainly suffice to explain the individual's positive view of surveillance in public spaces. Security cannot be both the sorrow free states of lack of worries and at the same time be the feeling that awakens in us when the power exposes their omniscient eye and demonstrates its potent control of threats in an online-threat full