Frank Skinner: Even if God isn’t watching you, Google is

Posted by Kendall Harmon

I think this ever-growing hysteria about the invasion of privacy in Great Britain might be a direct result of the secularisation of our society. As a Roman Catholic, I've spent my whole life believing that my every move is being monitored. God, after all, is the ultimate CCTV. There have been many occasions when this sense of being watched has led me to do the right thing rather than the easier or more pleasurable wrong one. We hate those intermittent yellow boxes on modern roads but they do, generally speaking, cause us to drive more safely.

Maybe, now that God doesn't feature in most people's lives, society need things like Street View and surveillance cameras to make people behave better. I don't suppose the citizens whose sins were exposed by Google fear they'll end up sizzling on Satan's griddle as a result but all this fuss about images of drunkenness, crime and lust does suggest a certain sense of shame.

Read it all.

Filed under: * Culture-WatchBlogging & the InternetReligion & Culture* International News & CommentaryEngland / UK

1 Comments
Posted March 27, 2009 at 5:00 am [Printer Friendly] [Print w/ comments]



1. libraryjim wrote:

As is the Obama administration:

“We could set up systems so that everybody in each house have their own smart meters that, uhh, will tell you when to turn off the lights, when the peak hours are, can help you sell back energy, uh, that you’ve generated in your home through a solar panel or through, uh, eh, other mechanisms.”

So his smart meters are going to act as ‘Big Brother’ for him.

March 27, 8:56 pm | [comment link]
Registered members must log in to comment.




Next entry (above): The Internet Industry Is on a Cloud—Whatever That May Mean

Previous entry (below): Lambeth’s £288,000 deficit due to incompetence

Return to blog homepage

Return to Mobile view (headlines)