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It was the best of times; it was the worst of times. A decade ago the science fiction author David Brin published the Transparent Society.1 It was his tale of two cities, set 20 years in the future. Brin had a vision, or rather he had two. He had foreseen, more clearly than most, the coming ubiquity of a “surveillance society” and he posited two very polarised outcomes. Brin decided to pose the reader a straight choice: Which of these two outcomes do you want? Brin told of two cities twenty years hence. From a distance both cities look very alike | The Internet gmOf Things ue of ambient technology mu and the all-seeing H e network of RFID ROB VAN KRANENBURG teboo The Internet ofThlnas H A critique of ambient technology and the all-seeing network of RFID Report prepared by Rob van Kranenburg for the Institute of Network Cultures with contributions by Sean Dodson Notebooks02 Dedicated to Suzy Neuféglise Roeliene van Wijk and Kitty de Preeuw and to my fellow travellers especially Ben Russell who was the first to help me map these new territories.