someMidTowner
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
A bit ridiculous:Reading the comments to that above article was interesting.
A bit ridiculous:Reading the comments to that above article was interesting.
A bit ridiculous:
View attachment 124551
Reading the comments to that above article was interesting.
Mass data-collection does raise some interesting questions of consent and privacy, of course.
Just thinking, but it sounds like Google will be especially motivated to get moving with developing this site.
We might see things happening here long before other sites along the eastern waterfront.
Particularly good timing for the announcement in context of the Amazon bid. There could be excellent synergy between Google here (and later in the Portlands) and an Amazon HQ2 East Harbour site (should that come to being).
Unfortunately, our government is going into the Amazon bid with no desire for added incentives. We're kinda play hard-to-get with the "take it or not leave it" approach with Amazon. It doesn't sound like we're gonna win the bid.
It is discussion best saved for the Amazon thread but we are not alone in this approach. Boston as well is offering Amazon zero incentives.Unfortunately, our government is going into the Amazon bid with no desire for added incentives. We're kinda play hard-to-get with the "take it or not leave it" approach with Amazon. It doesn't sound like we're gonna win the bid.
It's naïve to think that the prime motivator for a profit-driven company Alphabet to create this kind of "city" isn't about data-mining. Of course is it. It's quite brilliant: instead of creating "probes" (smart phones, home assistants) into the consumer's life, they will bring the consumers into their world.
So, yah, it will be cool for Toronto to get this technology first, but it is another step on what could be a dangerous path for humanity. Nothing ridiculous or hyperbolic about this point-of-view. In fact, we need more people subscribing to it, particularly in North America, where privacy doesn't seem to be a thing anymore.
Here's a great article with lots of quotes from former (and prominent) engineers at FB , Google etc who know what's going on:
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/oct/05/smartphone-addiction-silicon-valley-dystopia
This is a crucial point. Not all developers are driven by the same motives, quite the opposite. Some are highly altruistic, and as long as their project is an *advancement* of sorts for the human condition, they consider that a success, and sleep well at night. Some are just money hungry pigs...It would be very nice if this was the catalyst to move the Planning department off of some of its strongly held non-negotiables about a whole range of stuff (including a few mentioned specifically in this post).
I have a new found respect for you.Disclosure - I have recently wiped my FB account for some of the stated reasons.
The plan, a response from an Alphabet/Google subsidiary to a Waterfront Toronto RFP, is steeped in a cool, urban sensibility that seems perfectly calibrated to at least one strand of the city’s current notion of itself. The 196-page document meticulously name-checks virtually every project, aspirational plan and policy preoccupation circulating in the region right now, all of it packaged in the hip branding of sustainability, complete communities and inclusiveness.
To my eye, Alphabet has proposed a model (“platform”) of urban development that could be described as a built form version of Facebook – a highly enticing but heavily surveilled environment literally programmed to capture and sell user information to marketers, technology companies and whoever else can figure out how to monetize the way we live in and move around urban spaces.
If you step back, it’s certainly possible to situate Sidewalk’s plan in the long tradition of idealistic urban reform ideologies that were meant to address the social or economic failings of the city at particular moments in time: Ebenezer Howard’s late 19th century Garden City suburbs; the Levittown subdivisions of the post-war era; the New Urbanist enclaves of the 1990s, including Celebration, the fantasy town developed in Florida by Disney and meant to showcase nostalgic urban design principles.
I didn't quite realize the depth of concern until speaking with some architects on it, one of them furious that WT, the City and Province would spread their legs so readily for the 'smooth talking tech-guy' when they've spurned many offers by developers for the models built and proven in Europe and some US cities.Seems that I wasn't the only one who thought it.