You do understand that GoogleGlass does not have a mobile data connection, and thus is reliant on your Phone's data, right?
If these kinds of devices have a network interface that allows it to communicate directly to a network or they have to use another device's network interface is irrelevant. What matters is that they CAN communicate.
There is no auto-upload. Just GPS, WiFi, and Bluetooth. To upload it is the same process as it is on your phone now.
Until someone decides to change a few lines of code or execute a program that automatically uploads the information. It will happen, I'm not sure how you can dispute this. It's not a possibility, it's a certainty.
Iphone has been doing exactly what you're saying since day 1; always-on data and GPS. To make things even better, Apple actively tracks it so you can see where your phone is online.
Although I have as much dislike of Apple as the next guy, the situation here is different. The problem is that once these kinds of devices reach a critical mass, you don't have to have an active role in this. You don't have to have a phone, glasses with cameras, whatever. Everyone else and whatever other devices are in your surroundings will do the monitoring without your consent. And like before, this is not a possibility, this is something that WILL happen.
And, becasue I'm curious, what good are images of you if no one but people you know can identify it? If you have no facebook, you can't be tagged aside from "This is Bob Dude" along with all the other Bob Dude's out there in the world with nothing to link it to you personally.
Sure someone else with a photo of you can use it to find those other photos of you, but again, to what end? They are not linked to you. The best they could do is find out who your "friends" (other people in the photos) are and track them down, which any good stalker can do anyway.
You seem to be stuck with the idea of Facebook or some other social network, but this information may not even be in a social network. It may be available as raw data. Hell, most likely this is how it will probably be stored like.
We don't need information to be neatly organized to use it. There are algorithms that deal with that.
As for what you linked, it's a wireless version of the wire things we have now. It's once again nothing special.
Again, you are not seeing the point. The wireless aspect makes deploying these devices MUCH easier and on a much wider scale.
If you still think it's nothing special, write your arguments to the scientific journals in the area about why you think the thousands of papers published so far are "nothing special".
Do you know what else there are thousands of papers on? The 802.x in it's entirety. If you think that's a good way to judge how special something is, you don't know the world of technology.
You have zero proof of where anywhere is going. Phones
could record sound, GPS data, sensor data, and even video of the inside of your pocket for hours on end. They don't, Iphone tracking excluded.
As for the rest, go get a tinfoil hat. Raw data is useless when you do not have access to it first of all. When you come up with a legit reason to think that anyone anywhere will be able to access it, come back to me on that topic.
Considering your interpretation of how "easy" it would be to make it always-on recording, I'm willing to bet you have minimal knowledge in the way technology works. It is not easy, at all, to handle that kind of data streaming for any device. The camera itself, the encoding (and there would have to be encoding), plus any networks you have running drain battery like mad. You would be lucky to get 2 or 3 hours out of it, tops. Not to mention that it would absolutly break the back of ISPs to have to handle that level of information, and the backs of any storage solution to hold it all. Even if the video quality is only 1 mbps, apply that to the number of people per cell tower we have today.
You are sitting here, trying to tell me that this will kill privacy in a world where privacy does not exist. You are trying to tell me that technology that has no hope in hell of doing what you think it will do will do it. And to top if off, you're telling me a scenario will happen when there is not enough infrastructure in the world to handle it in the first place.
And once again, regarding tagging, they can give it a name all they want. In this day, a name is not an identifier. Being tagged when there is no more information to tag it to besides a name is useless. (see below)
Yes. I think anyone worried about privacy due to this is smart. The ability to take pictures and video unanounced is unfortunate to others. However, anyone thinking that translates into always-on, anyone can find me always doesn't know enough, and is simply being paranoid.
Battuta's claims are more reasonable, aside from the tagging thing which was poorly explained on my part.
What I meant; You can tag someone all you want, but all it is is a name and a photo. If you do not have an account with all the information, it can not be tagged to, say, your address. Only your name. If someone took a picture of me, it wouldn't be "That's Kyad! he lives at *******, **, and likes dogs". It would simply be "That's Kyad!" in a world of many other kyads. (which is a bad example since as far as I know I am the only one, but the point stands)
If I gave you my full name, right now, you would find almost nothing on me. You would find a Facebook account that is not mine. You would find several Linkedin accounds that are not mine, and a ton of pictures of people of all races that are not me. The ability to tag a photo with a name, and even GPS data, really means next to nothing. Real-time could be a bit of a pain, but someone would have to actually be searching for you too for that to matter much. I guess people who skipped work, have facebook aco****s, and get met by someone they know on the subway could be in trouble if their boss decided to check that way (assuming they didn't just post up proof themselves) and they could get in trouble, but that's largely the extent of it. Either way, without someone who actually knows you, both name and face (and searching for it), it means almost nothing.
And lastly, the Wireless sensor network.
It's a network. It's wireless. It has sensors on it.
Do you really want to know what that is? It's a true wireless router. Each node takes in info from the last transmission it recived that was designed to go to it, and in turn to spits it out again with a new destination based on where the packet was ment to go. Just like a normal router, except instead of being over a wire, it's broadcast over the air.
Set your phone to be a Bluetooth wireless hotspot. Congrats, you just did the exact same thing a different way. Now make whatever the bluetooth thing connected to it is a sensor for, I dunno, air polution. Hey! Now you have a Wireless sensor network!
Like I said, nothing special. We have been able to do that for decades now, this one is just in one neat package instead of some hacked together job I can do in my basement. It's still incredibly inefficient compared to wired since it's like using a hub instead of a switch (broadcast), but it does have an appeal for versatility and ease of use compared to their wired counterparts.