I told you it was just the tip of the iceberg. On the technology pages of the BBC at the end of last month there was a report on an advertising breakthroughs which could allow retailers to know our mood and therefore project appropriate adverts to us.
Sound familiar – it was part of the Tom Cruise Minority Report film. He would walk through the mall and the adverts would recognize him and flip to a relevant product.
Now the Centre for Future Studies (what a creepy sounding organisation that is), commissioned of course by a digital advertising company is predicting adverts that can tell our mood through emotion recognition software. Drugs if we are depressed or Space Hoppers if we are happy I guess. NEC in Japan already has technology that can guess our age and gender and serve up the right adverts. If all this is linked up to information on social network sites then they could know all our likes and dislikes and find the right selling messages.
So far the outrage has come from the privacy lobby. Of course that is a concern but isn’t the outrage the fact that human beings are fast becoming walking sales targets – our emotions and moods exploited to do just one thing – sell us more. We become he servants of the market machine. It’s more Matrix than Minority Report. We think we are the advanced stage of a turbo-consumer society – but its only just begun.
Occasionally just occasionally someone, because of who they are, says something to make you sit up and take note. Its rare but it happened this weekend. Andrew Witty the CEO of drugs giant GSK said some companies allowed to themselves to be seen as “detached from society” which was “completely wrong”. On tax, and other matters one would presume like pay (Witty compared to his peers is only modestly remunerated), he said in an interview in the
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Every minute of every day the search for profit wages an endless battle against the needs of people. Our lives are relentlessly commoditised but wrapped up in a sweetly coated pill called seduction. Mostly the market wins and another bit of our life becomes a space to sell us more stuff. Occasionally society fights back and says this far and no further. Here are examples in the news today.
This has been the week of tuition fees. What New Labour started with the introduction of variable fees and then the Browne inquiry to raise them the Coalition has now finished. Another realm moves decisively from the public to the private. Debt means making choices that pay off debt. Critical or social thinking wont pay the bills. Universities will become more like supermarkets – offering loss leader courses and the rest. Citizenship dies just a bit more and consumerism takes an even firmer grip on our lives.
While standing on a platform for a train that will never come, to go to work to earn money for stuff I don’t really need I looked at myself and thought ‘why am I doing this’. Why not instead use the time to play with the kids in the snow?
There is a constant struggle between the interests of society and that of free markets. The nature of the relationship between the market and society, and who has the upper and at any one moment can be direct through individuals or groups – or it can be through the state. I thought this was a good example of state intervention. In Spain the government has ordered chewing gum firms to ensure their product is less sticky and therefore less messy on the streets. It’s a small example but it shows what can be done.
More queues today in central London today. This time for a new Lanvin range at H&M. I write that like I know what Lanvin is – I don’t. Its obviously desirable and usually more expensive than the cut price offers being sold for the first time today. Luxury brands selling cheap entry level products is now commonplace. Luxury is for all. Even if its a cut price £1.99 cotton bag. It means you too can own a bit of luxury on the cheap.
Im trying hard not to consume. In parts its practical – money is tight though I’m far more comfortable than many. But I’m also thinking again about anti-consumption. So new clothes are out and other extravagances. Its not that I don’t have a wardrobe full of things I never wear. But consumption is not just physical but emotional. On Saturday I consumed 