"[DoCoMo] believes that the mobile phone will become the essential controller of a person's life," added Mitsuishi, oblivious of the double meaning of the English word "control." "For example, in the medical field it will be your authentication system and you can examine your medical records, and to make payments you will have to hold a mobile phone. You will not be able to lead a life without a mobile phone, and it will control things at home too. We believe that we need to expand the range of machines that can be controlled by mobile phone."You won't be able to lead a life without a mobile phone? That sounds awesome, said no one.

I don't own a cell phone now. I don't want to own a cell phone ever. I hate talking on the phone, phones feel clunky and awkward in my pocket, owning a phone is a great way to lose $200 on the T, and I don't want to be that accessible anyway. What about choice? In the future, will the penalties for living your life how you want be prohibitively costly? Here's an innocuous sounding example from The World is Flat that D and I noticed too: Southwest Airlines gives passengers boarding passes in three groups, A, B, and C. Southwest doesn't reserve seats, so it's a first come, first serve basis. If you check in early, you have a good shot at getting in the A boarding group, and a better selection of seats and overhead storage. So, that's fine, I have no problem with that. But since Southwest started doing self check-in, you have the ability to print your boarding passes at home and grab a spot in the A group days before anyone else. However, if you don't have a computer at home, or if you aren't down with the latest fad, you don't have a chance. You will likely have to sit apart from whoever you're traveling with, and in a middle seat. Your flight will suck, and if your seat-mates are anything like me, they'll probably be blasting you with farts the whole time. Enjoy that.
So, now expand that to everything! If you don't have your cell phone/ID when you go to the doctor's office, you'll be charged a $10 paperwork fee. Your phone will be scanned and charged for tons of things, and you won't even know it's happening. Oh, didn't you see the sign that the bathroom costs $1.50? We charge everyone's phone when they walk through the doorway. I bet it will be impossible to fight the charges too. I was told by Verizon that they wouldn't be charging me a $200 cancellation fee when I left for Japan, and after 4 or 5 angry phone calls, they have yet to return my money. I hope they bought a trampoline with my money and were later mangled by it.
I opt out. I want to see America maintain it's technological and economic lead, but not if it means I have to get a cell phone. It's much harder to get them out once you let them in.
Interesting that you mention this right after I spend a week with 10 14 year olds. These kids, and I kid you not, are crack-ADDICTED to their phones. We took them away to start the trip, but it was so traumatic that the third night they all starting crying.
ReplyDeleteI am also impressed with you not having one. I think that makes you the only person I know.
I don't like being that accessible either, but it can be very useful. If I don't want to be called, I just turn it off....
As for cell phones leading to fascism....that sounds like a stretch, but cancer, carpel tunnel, ADD, etc. I can see happening pretty soon.
Yeah, it's a stretch. But having a cell phone makes it possible to track someone with GPS technology. Doesn't that bother anyone else? Does that not sound crazy? Like, we don't need to implant a tracking device under your skin, because you voluntarily carry one in your pocket. Also a stretch.
ReplyDeletehmmm, and i make it even easier! here, i just put up a site that shows where i am at any time that i choose to make it visible. google uses the gps in my phone and cell tower triangulation. whenever i open up google maps on my cellphone, i've authorized it to update my location.
ReplyDeletehttp://sites.google.com/site/kskobac/
more thoughts to come on this later....