Surveillance capitalism claims to see outward, yet its deepest capture is inward. Any system that grounds authority in exhaustive data collection must internalise its own apparatus. The observer becomes the most observed entity in the field. As capture intensifies, freedom contracts. Control architectures require constant calibration and escalation, growing brittle, paranoid, and self-consuming. Power built […]
Categories
Surveillance Capitalism
- Post author By G
- Post date Jan 26, 2026
- No Comments on Surveillance Capitalism
- Tags algorithmic control, authoritarian systems, coercive systems, cognitive capture, complexity theory, cybernetics, data ethics, data surveillance, data-driven governance, digital authoritarianism, digital governance, empire collapse, epistemic collapse, governance critique, governance systems, historical cycles, institutional failure, institutional paranoia, modern surveillance, panopticon, political epistemology, political history, political philosophy, political power, political psychology, political theory, power and control, power dynamics, power structures, privacy erosion, social control, social systems, state control, surveillance capitalism, surveillance state, systemic risk, systems theory, technological domination, technological power, total surveillance