The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

What sort of informatio­n will TV spies gain from us?

- Lucy Penman

I seem to have noticed a rise in the number of life insurance ads on my telly lately

Iwas enjoying a coffee with some friends a few months ago when one of them mentioned she had made a point of not watching something on television because she didn’t want to give “them” the satisfacti­on of knowing she was watching.

There was an awkward silence before we began quizzing her.

Under prolonged interrogat­ion, she claimed people could monitor what you watch on TV and then can tailor advertisem­ents to your tastes. She knew this to be true because her husband had told her. How we laughed. The mocking was relentless. I now realise that her husband may have been not so much paranoid and delusional as quite possibly a CIA spy, after the assertions last week by Wikileaks that the intelligen­ce agencies can turn TVs into bugging devices

I feel my friend has now had the last laugh. I wished I had asked her more about the targeted advertisem­ents, though. I seem to have noticed a rise in the number of life insurance ads on my telly lately. I hope there is no sinister motive to this.

It does leave me worrying about the operatives who may be tuning in to hear what is going on in the average sitting room while the telly is on.

Those of us with an unfortunat­e addiction to Gogglebox can tell you how entertaini­ng watching people watching telly can be but presumably those entertaini­ng bits are sifted from many hours of mindnumbin­g gawping at the box.

Then there are those conversati­ons that inevitably occur in front of the TV and should really remain private.

“Oh, that’s whatsisnam­e from that thing we watched.” “No it’s not, it’s the one that looks like that other one”. “Bet you a million pounds it’s whats is face”. “What was that programme called? Did we even watch all the episodes? What was his name?” “Shut up, I’m trying to hear what they’re saying”. “You shut up.” “Stop telling me what to do. Oh I missed that, what did he say?” “I couldn’t hear, you were telling me to shut up.”

For the sake of their sanity, I do hope the spooks are well trained in code-cracking.

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