1.1 What this unit is about
Each venture
Is a new beginning, a raid on the inarticulate …
T. S. Eliot, ‘East Coker’
At that time, I was working in computing, and most people couldn't really understand what I did. Computers were mysterious boxes that were hidden away in large, secure buildings in major companies and government organisations. The average person came in contact with them only in the form of stories in the press or printed statements they received from their bank or gas supplier.
All that has changed, as dramatically and as completely as from ‘before television’ to the present day. Today, most people experience computers not as remote machines producing bills or directing space flight (though they still do these things), but in two ways:
- as a medium that combines graphics, video, sound and text to impart information and a means of enabling us to shop on the internet, and so on;
- as a ubiquitous but hardly noticeable means of controlling everything from toasters to air traffic.
Exercise 1
Take a moment to look in your wallet or purse. What kind of persona do you think you present through the cards and documents it holds? Each of these is likely to mean that some organisation holds electronic records about you.
This is what I found in my wallet:
My persona consists of all of this data, whether I am aware of it or not. That is what I mean by a persona: a ‘picture’ of you created by various collections of data about you, such as your finances, shopping habits, interests.
You might like to ask yourself at this point how aware you were, before doing the above Exercise, that so much information about you existed in the public domain.
Discussion
This is what I found in my wallet:
- driving licence;
- two credit cards;
- a store card;
- three library cards for different libraries;
- membership cards for the National Trust and RSPB;
- loyalty cards for an airline and a car hire firm;
- my National Health Service medical card.
My persona consists of all of this data, whether I am aware of it or not. That is what I mean by a persona: a ‘picture’ of you created by various collections of data about you, such as your finances, shopping habits, interests.
You might like to ask yourself at this point how aware you were, before doing the above Exercise, that so much information about you existed in the public domain.
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