Case File 373-DARPA, LifeLog and Facebook
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From the windowless offices of the Pentagon to the glass-walled campuses of Menlo Park, a silent thread of DNA connects the world’s most powerful defense agency to the apps in your pocket. A secretive agency for military research has long been the forge where the future is hammered out, responsible for the internet, GPS, and the very foundations of the digital age. But as the Cold War faded and the Information Age dawned, the agency’s focus shifted from the physical battlefield to the cognitive one.
Long before "engagement metrics" and "algorithmic feeds" became household terms, programs like LifeLog sought to create a multi-modal, permanent database of a person’s entire existence—their movements, their conversations, and their connections. Officially shuttered in 2004, the project’s ghost seems to have found a new home in the private sector, where the data once sought by intelligence officers is now voluntarily surrendered by billions of users every single day.
Was the rise of social media a spontaneous cultural phenomenon, or was it the ultimate "dual-use" technology, perfected in a lab to map the human social graph? As we trace the venture capital back to its tactical roots and examine the psychological operations buried in our notifications, the boundary between "user" and "subject" begins to blur. Is your smartphone a tool of connection or a sensor node in a global net of behavioral engineering?
This case file, join the Theorists as we follow the funding and unmask the architects of the digital panopticon in… DARPA’s Shadow over the Social Web
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