If Technology Can Be Built, It Can Also Be Regulated ⚖️👓
The experiment by students at Harvard University showed something important.
If a small group of students can connect smart glasses, facial recognition, and public databases into a system that identifies strangers in seconds…
Then society should be asking a simple question:
❓ Why are we waiting for harm before we create protections?
History shows the same pattern again and again.
New technology appears.
Warnings are ignored.
Something goes wrong.
Then come the investigations, lawsuits, and public apologies.
🚑 The “damage control crew” always arrives after the fact.
But prevention should come first.
If engineers can design software that identifies strangers without consent, then governments should be able to design laws and safeguards that protect the public.
Who Should Protect Citizens? 🛡️
In Canada, several institutions are responsible for privacy protection.
The watchdog in British Columbia is the
Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner for British Columbia.
At the national level there is also the
Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada.
These offices investigate privacy violations and warn governments about emerging risks.
But there is an important limitation:
⚖️ Privacy commissioners cannot create laws.
Only elected officials can do that.
In British Columbia, laws are passed by Members of the Legislative Assembly in
British Columbia.
That means public pressure matters.
When enough citizens raise concerns, governments begin to act.