
[Source] Back to the Future came out 40 years ago last week. While the original took us back to 1955, the end of the movie and the sequels imagined 2015 with flying cars and hoverboards. What they missed was the real transformation: how eagerly we'd hand over our most intimate biological data to corporations and governments.
Yesterday, someone sent me a document. I can't verify its authenticity or origin, but they claimed it was leaked from a government archive dated 2065. Given what we already know about the current surveillance infrastructure—and the economic incentives driving the "Internet of Bodies"—it feels disturbingly plausible.
Sometimes, the best way to understand the present is to imagine how future historians might view our choices.
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