@Em0nM4stodon even as a zoolienal I can remember when privacy was much more of a thing.
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@Em0nM4stodon even as a zoolienal I can remember when privacy was much more of a thing. 6 comments
@drwho @skymtf @Em0nM4stodon In UK we'd sometimes memorise numbers of payphones near hangout spots (they usually accepted incoming calls), but mobile phone ownership was already fairly common for a young adult by early 90s (albeit with security concerns of analogue ETACS). There weren't any easy to access bridge circuits; British Telecom special service numbers (174/175 etc) were blocked from payphones (BT were quite clued up by the 90s on stopping anyone getting anything for free) @drwho @skymtf @Em0nM4stodon by the mid-late 90s most young people already had GSM mobiles and telephone calls in Britain were dirt cheap or even free (most mobile plans gave free minutes) - whole subcultures such as the rave scene, pirate radio stations were built on this access to affordable and fairly secure comms (even before the Internet became widespread, which was only from late 90s/early 00s) @vfrmedia @skymtf @Em0nM4stodon I can't even fathom what it would be like to live in a country with so reasonable a telecommunications system. Where I lived in 412, the rave scene was pretty much built on e-mail (if one had access), hacked voice mail boxes, and phone trees. BBSes were a small part of that and faded out around the same time BBSes did. |
@skymtf @Em0nM4stodon I'm Gen X and a lot of the privacy was due to our tech education, being able to find physical spaces to hang out in which had fewer linked CCTV schemes present and being careful what we said/did outside these places - we had to share access to fixed phones in locations where parents and other could easily overhear, and the first mobiles were trivial to monitor on radio scanners (but that did mean we could also monitor the cops)