our first family computer was a macintosh color classic someone left
at our laundromat in 1999 with a sheet of paper taped to it reading
"FREE! WORK GOOD!" it indeed worked good. we didn't have an internet
connection, but it offered more convenient word processing than the
sears typewriter we'd had up to that point. my mom was completing a
master's degree at the time, so she mostly used the macintosh to
write papers, which she would then transport on floppy disk to the
campus computer labs to print out. it also had a couple old games
installed by the previous owner, which was about as far as it held
my interest. it was the first digital device that we owned more
advanced than an alarm clock, and it was a clear benefit. eventually
we got ad-supported "free" dial-up and a computer that cost money to
connect to it, and by the time i went to college, i had a mobile
computer that was always online and fit in my pocket---the lg ally,
still the pinnacle of phone design as far as i'm concerned.

i grew up on the trailing edge of the "digital divide:" we lagged
considerably behind the middle class rate of adoption in home
computing, home internet access, and later, "smart" phones. but this
divide was transitory: as consumer technology got faster and cheaper
(and it did so quickly enough that a computer sold for $1400 in 1993
could be abandoned at a laundromat in 1999), the rising tide would
lift all boats. the clinton years saw a lot of optimism about the
internet's equalizing potential. it would be an engine of economic
mobility. in cyberspace, race and gender would be non-factors, as we
would confront each other as pure rational minds---a digital "veil
of ignorance." a lot of this '90s optimism, whether it was spouted
by the president, wired magazine, or matthew lillard's character in
/hackers/, is so obviously naive now it's as if it was written to be
repeated in knowing tones by adam curtis. (in clinton's case, it was
not naivete, but a thin justification for cutting social services.)
but a mood of inevitability prevailed: sooner or later, you would
drive onto the information superhighway, and it would take you to a
better place than you'd left. the socially transformative power of
digital communications was considered self-evident as late as 2011,
in the paternalistically named "arab spring:" where western military
intervention failed in bringing democracy to the mohammadean orient,
western technology would succeed!

the 2010s "techlash" was precipitated by a wave of centralized
platforms and services that demonstrably and visibly made the world
dumber and worse. as a latecomer to mobile platforms, most of the
phone-first "apps" baffled me. the first experience i remember where
i greeted a new platform with befuddlement was instagram. it was
like flickr or photobucket, but it only worked on your phone? what
was the point? snapchat i still can't imagine the usecase for beyond
sending self-destructing nudes (which is a value-add, granted), and
never bothered with. platforms based on endlessly scrolling vertical
video i genuinely think shouldn't exist. they will doubtless be re-
placed by something even worse that i cannot yet imagine. this isn't
a radical or novel opinion. expressing it gets you (fairly) eyerolls
and mutters of "yeah, we know, everybody knows." even before we get
to the hidden costs of consumer electronics manufacture, there is a
clear sense of exhaustion with the ubiquity of screens opening onto
a landscape of undifferentiated slop.

now that the mood has finally soured on the unqualified benefits of
"social media" and "smart" devices, the median consumer no longer
feels a need to swap out their phone every year or two, paranoia
about bugging your own home with botnet gadgets is belatedly wide-
spread, and we comfortable few are at least dimly aware of consumer
electronics manufacture's human cost, from suicides in shenzhen to
slavery in the congo, there is an uncomfortable inversion of the
"digital divide." the question in the crystal palace is not "when
will this new technology be available to me?" but "how can i escape
this technological environment that seems inescapable?"

if you spend any time in online spaces dedicated to digital privacy,
you'll quickly discover a small ecosystem of blogs by paranoiacs who
suggest you move to the country in the grand american tradition of
thoreau, emerson, and kaczynski. live an authentic, even "trad" life
off-grid. grow your own vegetables. keep chickens and goats. convert
to some austere variety of christianity. abstain from masturbation.
drink unfluoridated water. this is likely overkill, especially if
you aren't the kind of person who uses "soy" as an epithet. there
are legitimate reasons to do some of it---you can live cheaply this
way with a lot of personal space, if you do it right (lots of "cheap
rural land" is cheap for a reason; don't be a sucker). but to escape
"technological slavery," as teddy k himself would tell you, it can
be both too much and not enough. the frontier of "civilization" is
often where new "security" technologies are first deployed, perhaps
unsurprisingly: it's smart to first test possibly classified tech
away from populated areas. for now this mostly means post-colonial
slums and borderlands, but it periodically turns inward for the sake
of ferreting out "domestic extremism" or routinizing other forms of
it (think cold war "ufo" sightings in the mountain west, e.g.).

the mythology of the early internet, coming as it did from the US,
was inflected with the mythology of the frontier, the homestead, the
rugged individual carving out his own space in the wilderness. since
the digital version has since been paved over and converted to sub-
urban developments and shopping malls, a certain kind of millennial
hobbyist has decided to enact the frontier fantasy in meatspace
instead. as with all individualist fantasies of escape, it's a
doomed proposition. (as an aside, a retreat to the woods to escape
the "degeneracy" of city life is one of the sillier plans of meme
fascists---it is almost impossible to overstate how much more common
bestiality, incest, and practices that we would today recognize as
child sex trafficking were in pre-industrial, agricultural society.)

there are, of course, reasons to be paranoid. unless you live at the
end of a country access road, you will probably always be on camera,
courtesy of your local police department, convenience store, or busy
body neighbor. if you carry a cellphone, you're always carrying
cameras, microphones, and radios that continuously tie your location
to your legal identity. if you conduct most transactions with card,
your bank (hence advertisers and probably the state) know where you
spend money, how much, and what on. if you tap to pay for the metro,
especially in systems like seattle's where fares are adjusted to how
far you travel, the city logs where you're going and when. etc. but
much like it is better to have a sensitive conversation in a crowded
bar than an empty one, you are afforded some protection by the fact
that you are surrounded by noise, lots of other people sending out
lots of other data. when you are "in the swarm," you are more likely
to be caught up in population-level regulations, but less likely to
be targeted specifically. this is a trade-off of a city.

before you retreat to a shack in the woods, try making some basic
day-to-day quality of life improvements. you'd be surprised how easy
it is to opt out of the more intrusive, psychically damaging parts
of our brave new world:
	* you can simply /not use/ social media. it isn't that hard.
	  take the time to establish other channels of communication
	  with the handful of people from twitter or facebook that
	  you want to keep in touch with, then delete your accounts.
	* use a frontend for youtube as much as possible, and an rss
	  reader for subscriptions. download or get physical copies
	  instead of streaming, like you used to ten years ago. (i
	  never stopped because, as noted, i'm Behind the Curve.)
	* as services like google and amazon decline in quality, it
	  seems easier than ever to stop using them. use metasearch
	  engines. run the occasional errand. get a library card.
	  the loss of convenience is very marginal. migrating out of
	  gmail is probably the biggest hassle, but it's worth it to
	  set up a mail client with PGP, or at least switch to a web
	  mail provider that doesn't scan your inbox to target ads.
		** you can also set up gmail with PGP in a mail
		   client, if moving email accounts is impractical.
	* firefox or chromium with a good content blocker and common
	  sense mitigations will offer good enough for privacy for
	  most purposes. that said, content blocking is about to get
	  much harder in chromium with manifest v3, and if google
	  twists mozilla's arm, firefox will follow suit, so the
	  good times may be over.
	* if your isp is known to sell user data to advertisers, you
	  /might/ benefit from using a vpn /if/ you understand the
	  trade-offs involved. don't pay for a vpn you heard about
	  from a youtube sponsor spot. it's well known vpns do not
	  make you anonymous. if you need anonymity, use tor or i2p.
	* use a password manager, preferably local. if you're going
	  to use a cloud-based one, use an audited open-source one
	  like bitwarden, or just the one built into your browser,
	  which will reduce your risk of entering passwords into
	  fields you shouldn't vs. an extension.
	* basically any debian-based distro will work as drop-in
	  replacement for windows, if this is what you're looking
	  for. on the arch side, manjaro is ostensibly better for
	  gaming, but i don't care about that shit so don't take my
	  word for it. "user-friendly" distros tend to have more
	  cruft and telemetry, but anything's an improvement over
	  windows. if you're jumping ship from mac, i'd just try
	  vanilla debian (that's what i did).
	* surveillance gadgets like "smart" speakers and doorbells
	  are still, for now, opt-in unless you live in a bougie new
	  development that preinstalls them (in which case you have
	  enough disposable income to shop around for a place that
	  doesn't). if you "own" a home on a thirty-year mortgage
	  with an hoa or condo board that requires video doorbells,
	  you have bigger problems. you're in debt peonage until you
	  die, and you're neighbors with hitler. you will go to jail
	  for having the wrong kind of grass on your lawn.
	* buy used when you need electronics. not only will it be
	  cheaper, but older devices are less likely to have anti-
	  features and more likely to be repairable and upgradeable.
the list is long and mostly too obvious to keep relating. you don't
need me to tell you not to use tiktok---not because china is using
it to brainwash you or whatever congress is saying this week, but
because it will make you stupid, something just as true of its corn-
fed american equivalents.

the point is, "opting out" doesn't take much, especially if you've
been "behind the curve" like i have. you probably already "opt out"
of plenty. most of the stuff i don't do, i don't even think about,
because it's less out of moral conviction than lack of interest. and
in most respects living in a city makes it easier because /there are
lots of other options/. this is why suburbanites went nuts during
the pandemic: they live in a wasteland with all the disadvantages of
the city (social control, surveillance, high taxes, etc.) and none
of the advantages of the country (cheap housing, autonomy, nature).
the suburbanite has nowhere to go besides department stores and fast
casual chain restaurants, so when those closed, they really were
"stuck in their homes." i wasn't! i hung out with my friends in the
park. 2020 wasn't actually that terrible a year for me, personally.

if there's one thing we've all internalized over the last few years,
it's that social isolation is not desirable, in times of crisis or
otherwise. in a city, it's harder to be isolated. you have people to
see and stuff to do. you get to know your neighbors by default when
they live right there. you don't have to depend on delivery services
when you live near shops, takeout restaurants, and library branches.
nor is it necessarily expensive. the most i've ever made in a year
is $35k (an outlier), and i've always lived comfortably. most north
american cities are not new york or san francisco; they're not (yet)
dystopian laboratories for social control and don't cost too much to
live a decent life in. an unimportant midsize city with low cost of
living is as good an option as moving to the country. when the shit
hits the fan, it won't save you, but nothing will. the question is
how to stay sanest in the meantime.