The big city isn't such an anonymous place anymore.

Ben Green, author of The Smart Enough City: Putting Technology in Its Place to Reclaim Our Urban Future, writes to explain the many ways "smart city" technology is a torjan horse for new kinds of corporate surveillance.
The first example Green cites on this theme are the 1,700 LinkNYC kiosks installed around the city, providing provide public Wi-Fi, free domestic phone calls, and USB charging ports.
Yet the LinkNYC kiosks are not just a useful public service. They are owned and operated by CityBridge (a consortium of companies that includes investment and leadership from Sidewalk Labs — a subsidiary of Alphabet, the parent company of Google) and are outfitted with sensors and cameras that track the movements of everyone in their vicinity. Once you connect, the network will record your location every time you come within 150 feet of a kiosk.
So, according to Green, smart city technology is just as much, if not more, about expanding the collection of personal data by government and corporations than improving the experience of the city or delivering services that make the daily lives of citizens easier or more prosperous.
If the implications of these smart city technologies are understood correctly the social contract of the future includes smart city technologies functioning as "covert tools for increasing surveillance, corporate profits and, at worst, social control."
Green has prescriptions for these dystopian outcomes that don't involve an anti-technology movement or a return to the Bronze Age. Green cites the Array of Things project in Chicago as an example of the democratic deliberation that can serve as an antidote to corporate surveillance.
FULL STORY: Smile, Your City Is Watching You

Montreal Mall to Become 6,000 Housing Units
Place Versailles will be transformed into a mixed-use complex over the next 25 years.

Planetizen Federal Action Tracker
A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

California High-Speed Rail's Plan to Right Itself
The railroad's new CEO thinks he can get the project back on track. The stars will need to align this summer.

Nevada Legislature Unanimously Passes Regional Rail Bill
If signed by the governor, the bill will create a task force aimed at developing a regional passenger rail system.

How Infrastructure Shapes Public Trust
A city engineer argues that planners must go beyond code compliance to ensure public infrastructure is truly accessible to all users.

Photos: In Over a Dozen Cities, Housing Activists Connect HUD Cuts and Local Issues
We share images from six of the cities around the country where members of three national organizing networks took action on May 20 to protest cuts to federal housing funding and lift up local solutions.
Urban Design for Planners 1: Software Tools
This six-course series explores essential urban design concepts using open source software and equips planners with the tools they need to participate fully in the urban design process.
Planning for Universal Design
Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Municipality of Princeton (NJ)
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada