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https://www.sociologygroup.com/panoptic-surveillance-meaning/
What is Panoptic Surveillance? Michel Foucault and Jeremy Bentham
by Sociology Group
The idea of panoptic surveillance was developed by the French philosopher Michel Foucault in 1975 by viewing the panoptic as a symbol of the disciplinary society of surveillance. Panoptic surveillance can be understood as a state of constant monitoring. Here, the one is observing is decentralized and those who are being observed are never directly communicated with. It is derived from the term panopticism.
https://haystack.mobi/wordpress/index.php/category/trackers/
haystack, mobile, privacy, trackers
Monkey business in children’s apps
https://haystack.mobi/
The Haystack Project
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2053951717734574
The needle and the damage done: Of haystacks and anxious panopticons
relationship between increased surveillance capacity and state power
the haystack and the panopticon
these metaphors share a flawed common entailment regarding surveillance, knowledge and power which cannot accurately capture important aspects of state anxiety generated by mass surveillance in an age of big data
https://haystack.mobi/panopticon/
Interactive map of tracking activity on mobile apps.
https://ethics.org.au/ethics-explainer-panopticon-what-is-the-panopticon-effect/
The panopticon is a disciplinary concept brought to life in the form of a central observation tower placed within a circle of prison cells.
The panopticon today: data
Today, we are more likely to identify panopticism in new technologies than in prison towers. Philosopher and psychologist Shoshanna Zuboff highlights what she calls “surveillance capitalism”. Foucault argued the “ingenious” panoptic method of surveillance can be used for disciplinary methods, and Zuboff suggests it can also be used for marketing.