The Surveillance Ladder: How America Accepted Total Tracking One Convenience at a Time
Total surveillance did not arrive all at once. That is why people accepted it. It came in layers. First, the camera on the corner. Then the camera in the store. Then the camera at the bank. Then the camera in the school hallway. Then the traffic camera. Then the license-plate reader. Then the doorbell camera. Then the phone in your pocket. Then the app tracking your location. Then facial recognition. Then data brokers. Then predictive scoring. Then automated suspicion. Each layer had a reason. Safety. Convenience. Efficiency. Fraud prevention. Crime reduction. Faster service. Better personalization. Smarter cities. The language was always soft. The infrastructure was not. Closed-circuit cameras trained the public to accept constant recording in public and semi-public spaces. At first, the footage stayed local. A camera watched a doorway. A bank recorded a lobby. A gas station monitored a pump. Then cameras became networked. Searchable. Shareable. Connected. The footage stopped being ju...