Opinion

Why the future of domestic tech should look to the past

By Hannah Sargeant

Updated Jun 2, 2020 at 04:18 PM

Reading time: 3 minutes


Innovation

Feb 20, 2020

Up until about 10,000 years ago, Homo sapiens had lived as hunter-gatherers, traversing the land to forage for wild fruits and hunt small animals. It was a modest lifestyle, and being constantly on the move, they diverged from this way of life by setting up camp and farming in specific places for prolonged periods. Around our huge technological advancement in food production, we built our homes, places of intended security, refuge and safety.

It seems a bit of a stretch, that when talking about the future of home technology in 2020, I would start by mentioning a period of around 9500-8500 BC. The truth is, so much of our modern lives can find their footings in this period. These were the earliest days of domestic home life, where we developed our own technologies in what we hoped would promote a better quality of living.

But the work itself was incredibly labour intensive, and although an increase in food was one thing, mortality rose along with a growing population struggling with a new under-nourishing diet. To make matters worse, rates in violence increased too. With new, valuable assets like farms and permanent homes, humans had far more to protect from hungry neighbours and greedy outsiders.

Fast forward to the 21st century, and our priorities are still focused on protecting our homes and what’s in them from the outside world. If anything, we’re even more paranoid these days, and rightly so, because now there’s tech to make these crimes even more feasible. With social media-enabled cybercrimes generating $3.25 billion in global revenue every year, cybercrime is a global pandemic. Attacking through our internet connections, social accounts and the mics in our Alexas, cybercrime is a reason for paranoia and anxiety in 2020 in the same way we fear the threat of terror.

It’s hardly the secured home ideal we were after, and as it stands, it doesn’t look like our data and assets will be any less up for grabs in the future, either. Screen Shot spoke to Ray Walsh, a data privacy expert from ProPrivacy, who predicts that with augmented reality (AR) and wearables, virtual assistants will be available in both virtual spaces and in real life. “The danger for consumers is that the technology will create a prison of sorts in which everything they do is always known […] As AI is leveraged more and more—the number of secondary inferences that those datasets produce will become more precise and imposing.”

And although kind of funny at first, coming across a piece of BBC Archive footage from a 1989 episode of Tomorrow’s World, which made predictions about where technology in the home would be by 2020, further exacerbated my worries about our unquenchable thirst for pointless tech, even when it’s not serving the public’s interests. 

Just like Ridley Scott’s 1982 Blade Runner predicted Los Angeles in 2019 as a dystopian abyss, researchers on Tomorrow’s World predicted no more powerpoints, but ‘plugs becoming pads, picking up power from anywhere on the wall’. From home devices that can’t compute your request no matter how ferociously you shout at it to instant pots that claim to make yoghurt right away but actually still take a very, very long time, have we all lost interest in what makes practical sense?

I’m not saying that we should return to our archaic ways of laboriously hacking at the soil with basic stone tools for our dinner—after all we’ve learned, that would be pretty ‘un-Sapien’ of us. But there are pros to the past that we seem to have forgotten in our obsession with the new, if not from 8,500 BC, but from more recent periods in history that didn’t rely so much on modern equipment that is contributing to our planet’s swift and unforgiving downfall. Perhaps by opening ourselves up again to our vulnerabilities of the past, we might actually stand a chance?

As the self-proclaimed ‘wise man’, it’s time to use our knowledge and regulate the rate in which we innovate and encourage the mainstream production of avoidable domestic tech, and focus our energies into more urgent avenues, like reversing some of its effects. In a sentiment I share, Amy Flemming from The Guardian recently made the case for “low-tech dumb cities instead of smart ones,” an argument deeply rooted in the ecological benefits of revisiting former processes that use little resources. Citing the Ma’dan people of Iraq and their floating buildings known as ‘mudhifs’, these structures made from natural reeds can be dismantled and re-erected in just a day. There’s certainly something very hunter-gatherer about the temporality of their eco-friendly living situation.

With the threat of the climate emergency hanging around our necks like a noose, the mortifying irony of our situation is staring back at us point-blank in the face. Greta Thunberg’s chilling declaration, “our house is on fire,” became quite literally true last year, with the 2019 Californian wildfires and then the more recent Australian bushfire crisis that still rages on in parts of New South Wales and Canberra. With thousands of houses being burnt to a crisp, where was our shiny new-age technology in helping us put out the fires and protect our homes?

The need to innovate new domestic tech once had an argument for improving lives in many factions of society—be it low-income families, the elderly, the disabled, the busy, and the lonely—but in many cases, our new developments have focused on mostly novelty extravagance; less excusable than ever with our rapidly overheating planet.

It’s 2020, and I’m calling for a new era of responsibility, a conscious effort to only use technology that truly enriches our lives, and to uphold the homestead as a safe space to look at memes and watch as many true crime documentaries on Netflix as I want, without every data delinquent in Silicon Valley knowing about it. After all, tech to protect us from other tech is already on the rise—a warning sign that we should all take seriously.

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