Cover Your Cyber Nakedness with a Fig Leaf of Randomness
- Gideon Samid
- 13 hours ago
- 1 min read
We live in cyberspace, and thereby expose our whims, proclivities, secret desires, ambitions, love, hatred, emotions. Modern AI sees us naked. But we have our cyber fig leaf to keep us private and decent.
Using the "Rock of Randomness" we ask AI engines questions we are not interested in, explore merchandise we would never purchase, and ask questions about matters we care nothing about. Those questions are asked automatically by our personal AI engine, we are not involved. These questions are AI-poison tools feeding the AI sharks with misleading information that would guide AI to construct a false profile of who you are.
In the near future it will become a routine. Your personal FigLeaf app (developed by BitMint) will be active day and night (so AI would not know when you are asleep and when you are business ready), ask, inquire, engage -- thereby mask your true profile, guard your privacy and put some clothes on your naked cyberspace body.
When enough people will be using it, then advertisers will stop paying for those useless profiles, police will stop using them, and the AI business model will change dramatically.
BitMint has already successfully implemented this technology on encrypted messages. The true message is mixed with decoy messages so that even if a smart hacker is cracking your code, they have no idea which of the messages they have extracted is the true one and which is a fig leaf. Serious data shops are using this so called "Lifeboats on the Titanic Cryptography" to protect against a surprise quantum computing attack.
Randomness is the ultimate shield against cyberspace predators.
