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Surveillance In The Truman Show

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He also wrestles with limitless surveillance and the reasons that people are willing to be surveilled. He suggests that people are willing to divulge information willingly and submit to surveillance because there are easily distracted by the novelty of technology and they are believe that they are receiving a service in return.4 In The Truman Show the surveillance is deemed acceptable by the audience because they are receiving as good, the television and Christof reasoned that the surveillance and major invasion of privacy was acceptable because he was giving Truman a happy simple life, separate from the cruel realities of the real world. However, The Truman Show diverges from Harcourt’s theories, because Truman is not aware of the surveillance …show more content…

The Patriot Act was hastily passed just a month later October and it severely limited the privacy of Americans and gave unprecedented power to the government and private agencies to track innocent Americans, turning regular citizens into suspects.5 In addition, the great technological evolution and emerged of social media that occurred round the same time, and shortly thereafter, created the perfect storm for the emergence of the largely unregulated surveillance society that we live in today.6 The result is digitization of people’s personal and professional lives so that every single digital trace that people leave can be identified, stored, and aggregated to constitute a composite sketch of ourselves and its only getting worse. In 2008, passed the FISA Amendments Act, which expands the government’s authority to monitor Americans’ international communications, in addition to domestic communications.7 In short, after 9/11 the U.S is left with a national surveillance state, in which “the proliferation of government technology and bureaucracies that are able to acquire vast and detailed amounts of digital information about individuals with minimal or no judicial supervision and often in complete secrecy,” giving the government and corporations with access to the data that the government compiles the ability to single …show more content…

It provides an optimistic vision of surveillance in which, like Truman, American’s will overcome the burdens of surveillance and remain autonomous anonymous citizens even in the face of increasing technological surveillance capabilities. It presents the ills of such a situation of excessive surveillance and the danger it poses. Truman is driven to the brink of insanity when he realizes that his life is not what it seems, but more than that, it is a moral issue. It is not right that Truman is unable to live a normal life and make his own choices. The audience, both within the film and watching the film, sympathize with Truman whose wife and best friend were both cast to play these roles. The film draws attention to its constructed nature and the impossibility of maintaining such a level of surveillance and control, even over a single subject like Truman, evident in his eventual escape. Person of Interest does not question the surveillance state, it utilizes it. The program’s pilot does not criticize the technological circumstances upon which the plot is founded. Instead, by blatantly utilizing surveillance, through The Machine, it suggests that hyper-surveillance is a necessary aspect of preventing and fighting crime. It cites 9/11 for

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