
“Privacy is not about something to hide. Privacy is about controlling access to yourself.”
Bruce Schneier has spent decades thinking about digital security and the hidden systems that shape modern life, and he pulls no punches in his assessment: Surveillance is the default condition of digital life because politicians lack the will to limit corporate power in a data economy that rewards the ongoing extraction of our information.
We talk about why “nothing to hide” is a reductive way of thinking about privacy, why the real danger is the loss of control over our own lives, and how data collection has become so normal that most of us barely notice it anymore. Bruce argues that concentrating so much information and power in too few hands poses a serious threat to democracy and to the idea of free individuals living private lives.
We also get into AI, proof of humanity, bot-filled public spaces, age verification, and how governments and companies justify ever more invasive systems in the name of safety, convenience, or efficiency.
Bruce’s diagnosis is simple: this is not a technology problem, it’s a political problem, and it will stay broken until we fix it.
You can visit Bruce’s website and subscribe to his Crypto-Gram newsletter.
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