REALITY CHECK: Government agencies are already deploying predictive surveillance technology on civilian neighborhoods. Software systems now calculate risk scores for specific addresses, attempt to forecast resident locations and routines, and generate maps to guide enforcement operations.



This is happening today. Intelligence units are using data analysis tools to profile entire communities—assigning algorithmic "danger ratings" to homes, streets, and movements. The infrastructure exists. The surveillance framework is operational.

For the Web3 community, this underscores a critical point: centralized systems inevitably concentrate power. When authorities control the infrastructure, data aggregation, and algorithmic decision-making, privacy becomes optional. This is precisely why decentralization, encryption, and user-sovereign technology matter.

The question isn't whether this technology will be used—it already is. The question is what alternatives we build to protect individual autonomy in an era of pervasive surveillance.
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