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Let’s Talk 国产视频 Seat Belts鈥擳echnology Seat Belts

Technology Seat Belts
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In my family鈥檚聽car you鈥檒l find a booster seat, a toddler鈥檚 car seat, and a full-fledged, rear-facing infant car seat. That鈥檚 because it鈥檚 the law to strap in your little ones, and it鈥檚 also the law for any adult in California to wear a seat belt. That said, an AC Transit bus to San Francisco doesn鈥檛聽have seat belts, and when my five-year-old heads to camp on the bus this summer, he also won鈥檛聽have a seat belt.

This is an example of how, despite the safety precautions we鈥檝e legislated, there are still, clearly, some holes鈥攑olicy holes, if you will.聽And technology has lately been stumbling into these holes with alarming frequency. As a result, it鈥檚 time to consider using what I call 鈥渢echnology seat belts鈥濃攐r, practices that may help us address technology鈥檚 consequences.

But first: some context. To an extent, we all misunderstand what technology is. Technology isn鈥檛 cryptocurrency, self-driving cars, artificial intelligence, or even iPhones, per se. It is, but it also isn鈥檛. By definition, technology is, as Dictionary.com , the聽鈥渃reation and use of technical means鈥澛燼nd their impact on聽鈥渓ife, society, and the environment.鈥 Likewise, as Sesame Street has , and perhaps surprisingly, explained, technology, in its most basic form, is a tool that helps people accomplish something. (On the show, after showing viewers items ranging from e-readers to tablets, the actress grabs a backpack, which she notes as technology鈥攁 tool to help you carry items.)

In short, technology is innovation, and innovation is generally good. But why do these usually useful tools go astray? And what should we do about it?

At least in part, it鈥檚 due to a lack of civic planning, our neglect when considering new scenarios and innovations. But it鈥檚 also because of a broader inability to be sufficiently proactive about the challenges technology can create, and its creators鈥 reluctance to take full responsibility for what they create. Put another way, there鈥檚 a tendency to put the tool on the table, step back, and see what happens, which allows us to wash our hands of any possible impact鈥攁part from profits and losses.

For instance, after the Cambridge Analytica data breach, Mark Zuckerberg in an interview that he would鈥檝e never expected, when creating 鈥渢he facebook鈥 in his dorm room, that this tool would be compromised, or that the breach would impact a presidential election. Now, after the recent hearings, some wonder whether he and other CEOs merely ask for forgiveness, rather than for permission.

The speed and scale of our innovations mean that we can no longer afford to take this type of wait-and-see approach.聽Regardless of whether our efforts are negligent or nefarious, we need聽policy before the next great fixers say that they hadn鈥檛 anticipated fill in your choice of disaster here.

Forward-thinking policy, counter-steps, and even protections bring to mind regulations, and regulations are generally thought to be where creativity goes to die. But seat belts don鈥檛聽impact a vehicle鈥檚聽speed; they aren鈥檛 brakes. Rather, they simply keep you from being hurled through the windshield. Today, more than ever, technological tinkering requires greater forethought about potential consequences鈥攖o prevent them in the first place, yes, but also to lessen the consequences of inevitable oversight.

But technology seat belts aren鈥檛 only about mindfulness. They鈥檙e also about crafting solutions for our solutions. We鈥檝e seen the need for this before and have acted. Take when dams were preventing salmon from migrating, and how we created fish steps to allow fish literally to leap over the obstacle.

What else might technology seat belts look like? I鈥檒l offer a few possibilities, with the hope that these ideas will eventually be dwarfed by other ideas they might spur.

Pre-patent or Licensing Requirements

Creators of new innovations should be required to indicate whom and what their projects might impact. This also ought to include a set of proactive steps they鈥檒l take to address these impacts. Akin to a business plan, a new device or tool should be accompanied by a 鈥渒eep it from hitting the fan鈥 plan. Tethered to these should be safety requirements for mitigating potential impacts鈥攖hink of it as a sort of bright yellow tape for the ideas themselves.

Equitable Access

With some innovations, legislation and practices should be calibrated according to their effect on the 鈥攁 wonky term for the measure of income inequality. If the ability to access information or thrive economically is indelibly linked to a technological resource, then unequal access only intensifies disparity. (Think of how internet access has become such a critical tool.) As tools become more important for our everyday needs, it鈥檚 key to address equitable access. Local government offices of innovation and other policy bodies should therefore scour existing policy for holes (similar to the example above of no seat belts on buses, even though it鈥檚 the law to buckle up), with a focus on where changes that result from a solution might lead to greater inequity.

Pre-emptive Public Service Campaigns

Several compelling public service announcements ran after thousands of automobile accidents were caused while texting while driving.聽Ideally, these public campaigns would get ahead of these issues. A body could take time before launching a new tool to think about, for example, what we shouldn鈥檛 do at the same time鈥攍ike writing emails and driving a car. We could then launch these ads before litigation requires them, as was the case for cigarette companies, or before the loss of life elicits behavior change.

In all these examples, you might notice that there鈥檚 still a general fuzziness around the notion of technology seat belts. Well, that鈥檚 due largely to a lack of true technology seat belts. There鈥檚 nothing (yet!) compelling this type of preventative action. Steps that look ahead are voluntary, and a real seat belt doesn鈥檛 ask you to think bracing thoughts as you drive.

Hence, it鈥檚 important, too, to prod the public to participate in what happens鈥攁nd, more specifically, to create a little mistrust of the notion that, 鈥淚t exists, so it鈥檚 good.鈥 Remember that , limiting the influence of technology on his kids. He and others had a of the integration of technology鈥攁nd so should we.

I鈥檓 not saying that there鈥檚 an easy, flawless solution. As humans, our tinkering will likely always generate errors, hiccups, and malfunctions. As the writer Evgeny Morozov , imperfection is baked into our humanity. Even so, we must strive鈥攖hough we鈥檒l likely land far short of perfection.

A few years ago, when my husband and I were discussing our plans for household budgeting, we considered using an excel spreadsheet, and even looked at a few online tools to track our budgeting as our inputs and outputs shifted. (Spoiler alert: More kids equal a lot more outputs!) One option was an online budgeting tool through which you log all details about your bank accounts and bills鈥攊ncluding your account numbers. My internal distrust alarm blared: There鈥檚 no way that could be a good idea. Fast-forward to a few months ago, when there was a data breach for just such a company!

That alarm needs to sound for all of us as we consider what鈥檚 ahead鈥攁n alarm not necessarily for the innovation, but for how it鈥檚 incorporated into our day-to-day lives.

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Autumn McDonald
Let’s Talk 国产视频 Seat Belts鈥擳echnology Seat Belts