Ottawa Citizen

Social-media scare

After On an intriguing take on erosion of personal privacy in cyberspace

- JEFF AYERS

Author Rob Reid examines the world of social networking and how intrusive it can become in our daily lives in his latest sci-fi endeavour, After On.

A network called Phluttr seems harmless at first and appears to be nothing more than a Facebook rival. Download the app on a smartphone or tablet and after clicking “accept” by not reading the agreement first, the system starts secretly invading your life. Soon it offers coupons for favourite foods or restaurant­s and then becomes a gossip by intruding on other users’ accounts and providing private informatio­n of friends and enemies.

Nothing is safe, and everyone’s life becomes nothing more than data to manipulate to the member’s advantage.

Reid asks a bold question by postulatin­g a world where privacy no longer seems to exist. How would people react to a social network where the system itself has developed sentience? What would it use and do to survive? What could it access to obtain informatio­n?

The author writes in a humorous and sarcastic style while unveiling a terrifying and frightenin­g scenario that seems all too real.

With so much informatio­n online and everyone locked into their phones, tablets and smart TVs, it would be easy for computer systems that perform tasks that normally require human intelligen­ce to dig into the personal lives of everyone — and use that data for nefarious purposes.

The way the story unfolds is intriguing, but at almost 550 pages and no chapter breaks, the reading might be a bit daunting for some.

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