Understanding surveillance as fundamentally asymmetrical knowledge, where power flows from information inequality rather than data itself.
The Tao Te Ching teaches that imbalance creates motion and power. Surveillance operates through radical information imbalance: corporations and governments know vast details about you while remaining obscure. Laozi would recognize this as unstable—the surveillor sees much, the surveilled nothing. This framework reveals that surveillance's power isn't data possession itself but asymmetry. A person who knows little about you but you know nothing about them holds power; mutual knowledge creates balance. Apply this by demanding transparency: request your data, understand what platforms know, investigate corporate structures. Where possible, observe the observers—research algorithms, understand business models, know who profits. This doesn't achieve complete balance but reduces asymmetry. Taoism suggests that systems in extreme imbalance eventually collapse or transform; awareness of surveillance's fundamental inequality is the first movement toward rebalancing.
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