Our Indelible Lives

This was last Thursday's Search Insider. As you can tell from the post, I've been spending a lot of time on the road and my blogging has suffered because of it. Despite starting with the best of intentions, I find it impossible to keep up with everything when bounding back and forth between airports, hotel rooms and conferences.

It's been a fascinating week for me. First, it was off to lovely Muncie, Ind. to meet with the group at the Center for Media Design at Ball State University. Then, it was to Chicago for the National Business Marketing Association Conference, where I was fortunate enough to be on a panel about what the B2B marketplace might look like in the near future. There was plenty of column fodder from both visits, but this week, I'll give the nod to Ball State, simply because that visit came first.

Our Digital Footprints

Mike Bloxham, Michelle Prieb and Jen Milks (the last two joined us for our most recent Search Insider Summit) were gracious hosts, and, as with last week (when I was in Germany) I had the chance to participate in a truly fascinating conversation that I wanted to share with you. We talked about the fact that this generation will be the first to leave a permanent digital footprint. Mike Bloxham called it the Indelible Generation. That title is more than just a bon mot (being British, Mike is prone to pithy observations) -- it's a telling comment about a fundament aspect of our new society.

Imagine some far-in-the-future anthropologist recreating our culture. Up to this point in our history, the recorded narrative of any society came from a small sliver of the population. Only the wealthiest or most learned received the honor of being chronicled in any way. Average folks spent their time on this planet with nary a whisper of their lives recorded for posterity. They passed on without leaving a footprint.

Explicit and Implicit Content Creation

But today -- or if not today, certainly tomorrow -- all of us will leave behind a rather large digital footprint. We will leave in our wake emails, tweets, blog posts and Facebook pages. And that's just the content we knowingly create. There's a lot of data generated by each of us that's simply a byproduct of our online activities and intentions. Consider, for example, our search history. Search is a unique online beast because it tends to be the thread we use to stitch together our digital lives. Each of us leaves a narrative written in search interactions that provides a frighteningly revealing glimpse into our fleeting interests, needs and passions.

 Of course, not all this data gets permanently recorded. Privacy concerns mean that search logs, for example, get scrubbed at regular intervals. But even with all that, we leave behind more data about who we were, what we cared about and what thoughts passed through our minds than any previous generation. Whether it's personally identifiable or aggregated and anonymized, we will all leave behind footprints.

 Privacy? What Privacy?

Currently we're struggling with this paradigm shift and its implications for our privacy. I believe in time -- not that much time -- we'll simply grow to accept this archiving of our lives as the new normal, and won't give it a second thought. We will trade personal information in return for new abilities, opportunities and entertainment. We will grow more comfortable with being the Indelible Generation.

Of course, I could be wrong. Perhaps we'll trigger a revolt against the surrender of our secrets. Either way, we live in a new world, one where we're always being watched. The story of how we deal with that fact is still to be written.


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Print | posted @ Monday, June 07, 2010 6:47 AM

Comments on this entry:

Gravatar # re: Our Indelible Lives
by John at 6/25/2010 1:01 PM

This is food for thought ... now, you have me thinking about our "digital footprint" - very interesting. All week I've been concentrating on "carbon footprints".
Gravatar # re: Our Indelible Lives
by Infrared Heaters at 10/11/2010 10:55 AM

There's a reason why Eric Schmidt jokingly (?) remarked that the there will be a rash of name changes in the future as the young people of today become the adults of tomorrow - and realize that everything they said and did as kids is archived for all the world to see, forever.

I wonder how many people think, before posting something on the Internet: "Hmm, this will be here for the remainder of time, and can be accessed by anybody in the world with a quick Google search."

Probably not many.
Gravatar # re: Our Indelible Lives
by Jasmine@TheanniversaryRose at 10/13/2010 12:07 PM

This is a very interesting topic. I was just having a conversation the other day (with my grandfather : ) about how much technological waste is being created. We always talk about landfils and global warming, but never the digital aspect of things. Thanks for the post!
Gravatar # re: Our Indelible Lives
by Percy at 12/16/2010 3:55 PM

Points to ponder ->We will trade personal information in return for new abilities, opportunities and entertainment. I can't argue on this one. The virtual world offers a magnitude of information and possibilities and yes, most of us would be willing to give out personal data for those bits.

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