- DW.com, Thursday, May 19, 2016 9:05 AM
Alas, we should have seen it coming - if only we'd been watching the screens that have so clearly been watching us. Even before this age of networked TVs and near permanent connectivity the future
was well written - way back in 1975 in John Brunner's novel, "The Shockwave Rider." Reading the science fiction classic today, you would be forgiven for thinking Brunner had a Samsung smart TV and the
year was 2057. This is a novel in which the protagonist, Nickie Haflinger, has inhabited numerous coded personalities, including that of a priest. A child who comes to him can't confess, because the
confessional booth is wired - "the secrecy of the confessional doesn't apply when you're talking to a microphone." It's "science in the service of morality" - and almost everything is decided on
statistics and controlled by computers.
Read the whole story at DW.com »