At CES, companies slowly start to realize that privacy matters

Gadgets

Every year, Consumer Electronics Show attendees receive a branded backpack, but this year’s edition was special; made out of transparent plastic, the bag’s contents were visible without the wearer needing to unzip. It isn’t just a fashion decision. Over the years, security has become more intense and cumbersome, but attendees with transparent backpacks didn’t have to open their bags when entering.

That cheap backpack is a metaphor for an ongoing debate — how many of us are willing to exchange privacy for convenience?

Privacy was on everyone’s mind at this year’s CES in Las Vegas, from CEOs to policymakers, PR agencies and people in charge of programming the panels. For the first time in decades, Apple had a formal presence at the event; Senior Director of Global Privacy Jane Horvath spoke on a panel focused on privacy with other privacy leaders.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

AI Startup Cognition Raises $1 Billion at $26 Billion Value
Snowflake CEO Weighs In on Sales Outlook, Signing $6 Billion Deal With Amazon
Huge fireball seen after Blue Origin rocket explosion
AI Inference Demand Won’t Stop Anytime Soon, Says Benchmark’s Vishria
Nvidia Enters the Laptop Market with Superchip, Taking on Intel and AMD

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *