Diamandis is not alone in this conviction. He joins a chorus of tech leaders, including Oracle founder Larry Ellison, who have long championed constant recording as a mechanism for social compliance. This philosophy gained fresh momentum following an interview with Will Marshall, CEO of satellite operator Planet, who noted that global observation systems now ensure that every human action—from construction to movement—remains visible to those controlling the infrastructure.
In section Startups & Technology
Peter Diamandis and the Tech Industry's Vision for Total Transparency
Humans behave better when they are being watched, argues Xprize founder Peter Diamandis. His vision of a planet wrapped in a multi-layered sensor ecosystem suggests that the erosion of privacy is an inevitability, framing the future as a world where no one can hide and accountability is absolute.

This surveillance architecture is already pervasive. From residential security cameras to automated license plate readers and smartphone data tracking, the apparatus for total visibility is firmly in place. Yet, the public response has been far from passive. Communities have begun actively resisting these intrusions, evidenced by citizens covering municipal cameras with trash bags and mounting legal challenges against privacy-eroding hardware. While Diamandis advises individuals to adopt a strategy of radical integrity to survive in a world with no 'off the record,' he fails to address the inherent power imbalance. He describes transparency as a neutral tool, ignoring that the definitions of 'good' or 'honest' behavior are ultimately dictated by the entities that own the sensors. In a landscape where the technology is concentrated in the hands of a few, the promise that surveillance might one day build trust remains an unproven, and highly contested, proposition.
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