Friday, October 16, 2020

social media is the ultimate grey area

There is a show I absolutely LOVE.  Like can watch over and over and over and over love.  It’s called Person of Interest.  It ran from 2011-2016 and I like this show for many reasons.  Basic premise:

An ex-CIA agent and a wealthy programmer save lives via a surveillance AI that sends them the identities of civilians involved in impending crimes. However, the details of the crimes--including the civilians' roles--are left a mystery. (imdb)

One of the most interesting things to me about this show is how they handle the ethics/morality of this kind of AI system having access to all the camera feeds and all online activity.  It's treated as the gray area it is.  There's also very little of the hero taking justice into his own hands which has absolutely ruined all other shows for me but I digress. ;)  

If your life was in danger would you want it to be saved by someone who had access to an AI that predicted the event, even if it meant basically nothing you did was private?

I don't have a straight answer to that question.  There's a lot involved and when you get people involved it all gets so messy.  

The reason I bring up the show is there's an episode in particular that deals with social media (which is the whole point of this post).  S1E18: Identity Crisis:

Finch and Mr. Reese are going after a person who seems to be leading a double life. However, they soon realize there are 2 people with the same social security number; one of whom is in danger and one who's an impostor. (imdb)

There are more and more people who are abandoning social media completely for various reasons.  I don't remember if the show goes into what the reason was for this person, but it's interesting that the fact that they had no social media made their identity easy to steal and almost end up in jail for the actions of the stealee (is that a word?  Google says no.  Oh well).  But on the flip side, having too much of a social media presence can make identity theft or other crimes easy as well (think home robberies because your social media pictures say you're on vacation....).  See - gray area?!

One of my favorite clips is below that comes from this episode (that inspired this post tbh).  The show is fiction, but it still makes you think.  For an app to be free and employ so many people, someone has to be benefiting financially in a BIG way.  And all that money that was floating around social media...I remember when social media didn't have ads....think about that one for a sec.  I'm going to stop thinking before I turn into one big conspiracy theory. LOL



As a side note: I'm aware of my spelling the word "grey" differently throughout this post.  If you count, I actually spelled it each way equally so :P


-adaline :)

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

rice is easy

Recently, I made rice for the first time.  I had been intimidated by rice my whole life.  I’ve always been abnormally curious and sometimes (okay a lot of times) downright nosy.  This didn’t bode well when my mom was making rice because I got the “mom glare” if I ever went near the pot of rice looking like I was going to take the cover off.  My brain translated that as “rice is sensitive and easily ruined”.  

My ex insisted we have a specific appliance just for rice and it took almost an hour to make.  Sure it made good rice, but that translated in my brain as “rice is sensitive, easily ruined, expensive, and time consuming”. 

SO imagine my surprise when reading the directions for a Blue Apron recipe that included rice.  Boil water, add rice, cook on low covered for 15 minutes.  y’all. Y’ALL.  It was so easy.  And it was delicious!  I’ve made rice about a half dozen times since then (sometimes with different things thrown in) and it still makes me chuckle at how *massive* a project I thought making rice was.  xD

another day, another lesson 

-adaline :)



Monday, October 5, 2020

“what is the most valuable thing you own”?

I journal on my phone in an app called Day One.  I like this app for a bunch of different reasons, but one neat thing they have is a daily prompt.  A question each day to answer in your journal.  

The one a couple days ago was “what is the most valuable thing you own?” and, as it’s supposed to, it got me thinking.  What defines value?  Who defines value?  Who do we *let* define value in our lives? My answer to the prompt was easy, no hesitation.  My cat.  

I think we all, myself included, fall into letting other people determine what’s most important, how to be successful, what the “key” to happiness is.  And that’s just going to result in some unhappy people when they realize there is no one-size-fits-all for happiness.  We are all responsible for figuring out what that means in our own lives and working toward it.  

I recently came to the realization that I am not yet interested in buying a house.  This realization came after I asked myself whether I wanted to buy a house because I actually wanted a house or if I wanted to buy a house because that’s what you’re supposed to do as a part of being an adult. Spoiler: it was the latter.  Just as I am perfectly content being on my own, I am also perfectly content in my apartment.  And maybe that will change at some point.  Maybe it won’t.  But I’m not any less successful, not any less of an adult, and definitely not any less happy because I rent instead of own.  

Another way of thinking about this question comes from the movie Leap Year (a wonderful Amy Adams rom com, if you haven’t seen it I definitely recommend you do).  The question posed was “if your house was on fire and you only had 60 seconds, what would you grab?”.  Later in the movie her character says “When my 60 seconds came around, I realized I had everything I ever wanted but nothing I really needed”. 

so what would you grab?

-adaline :)