> going to use a drone to replace your cellphone with a piece of uranium
That's assuming they can figure out who you are in the first place. My pipe dream for the internet (that I thought we were getting way back in the 90's) is total anonymity. You can say whatever you like about the mossad, or the NSA or the KGB or whatever you like, and they'll never be able to figure out whose cellphone to replace with a piece of uranium.
We have the technology to make it happen (thanks to the paranoid security researchers!) just not the collective will to allow it.
The biggest social challenge to this is astro-turfing, from my own point of view. Even total anonymity with proof of work doesn't solve the problem. Like the idea we want is that people can speak truth to power. But total anonymity makes it quite difficult to figure out if its power speaking lies to create a false perception of the truth.
I mean go read 4chan, a place where there is something like total anonymity. Those people are constantly imagining that half the comments on the site are generated by intelligence agencies and, who knows, maybe they are right? I really do wonder if there is any way to reap the rewards of total anonymity without the poison of bad actors.
I'm somewhat moderate on the issue from a practical point of view. I think citizens have a right to some sort of reasonable privacy and I don't think laws which try to regulate the technical mechanisms by which we can have it make sense, no matter how evil the use of the technology is. But I don't think that, in the end, it is beyond the remit of authority to snoop with, for example, a court order, and the means to do so. I expect authority to abuse power, but I don't think that technological solutions can prevent that. Only a vigilant citizenry can do it.
That's assuming they can figure out who you are in the first place. My pipe dream for the internet (that I thought we were getting way back in the 90's) is total anonymity. You can say whatever you like about the mossad, or the NSA or the KGB or whatever you like, and they'll never be able to figure out whose cellphone to replace with a piece of uranium.
We have the technology to make it happen (thanks to the paranoid security researchers!) just not the collective will to allow it.