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We live in a time where our every click, swipe, and movement leaves a trackable imprint. It feels liberating to tap into boundless efficiency, yet many wonder if greater convenience is worth the loss of privacy. Beneath this tension lurk emotional and ethical dilemmas that challenge our sense of self.
This revealing guide explores why hyper-transparency dominates modern life, and how our personal data rights can slip away without us noticing. It looks at how surveillance technology steers thoughts and behaviour, how predictive profiling shapes our decisions, and why digital anonymity might be vanishing. Drawing on lived experiences, practical examples, and focused research, it illustrates how ai privacy ethics clash with fast-paced innovation.
Whether you value freedom vs security or struggle with the exposure psychology of so much openness, expect eye-opening insights and strategies. Learn to navigate blurred lines of data ownership and scrutinise the transparency culture redefining your digital footprint. Discover a balanced, resilient way to adapt, reclaim control, and sustain your well-being in a hyper-visible world.

The Transparent Mind

SKU: 9789374592076
$35.99 Regular Price
$24.62Sale Price
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  • Kaia Solander is a technology researcher and social observer driven by a curiosity to understand how rapidly evolving digital systems reshape human emotions and rights. Growing up in a region where open discussion of political issues was once discouraged, she developed an appreciation for privacy's power to safeguard personal autonomy. Through field experiences and work in community-focused projects, she has seen first-hand how surveillance can subtly influence individual choices. Writing for a wide range of readers, her approach is informed by a commitment to personal dignity and collective well-being. Kaia draws upon a fascination for the medieval tradition of guarded correspondence, finding parallels in today's encrypted messaging and data-hungry platforms. Above all, she seeks to empower people to ask probing questions about transparency, technology, and how to protect the deeper layers of who we are in an age of precarious openness.

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