First published at 07:57 UTC on May 12th, 2022.
Around the world, there are several Smart City commonalities which can be easily observed in practice and in literature:
Surveillance. Monitor people using biometric facial scanning, geo-spatial tracking, financial data, social media, etc. A po…
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Around the world, there are several Smart City commonalities which can be easily observed in practice and in literature:
Surveillance. Monitor people using biometric facial scanning, geo-spatial tracking, financial data, social media, etc. A population that is surveilled can be easily controlled.
Transportation. Force people out of private vehicles into shared public transportation such as scooters, bicycles, buses, light rail, etc. Without private transportation, they are locked into the city and out of the rural area.
Data. Collect real-time data from the Internet of Everything (IoE). IoE is an expansion of the Internet of Things concept to include people as well.
Control. Social engineering is always leading the thought process of Smart City development. However, unlike elected political representatives, the social engineers are always self-appointed Technocrats who decide what citizens should or should not do, where citizens should or should not go, with whom citizens should or should not associate with, etc.
All of this fits the original definition of Technocracy, as seen in The Technocrat magazine in 1939:
Technocracy is the science of social engineering, the scientific operation of the entire social mechanism to produce and distribute goods and services to the entire population.
https://www.technocracy.news/day-9-technocracy-and-smart-cities/
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