Watching Catherine Crump’s TED Talk made me realize something I honestly hadn’t thought about before: how much of my everyday life is quietly recorded without me ever knowing. And not in a dramatic, spy‑movie way — just through something as simple as my license plate.
Automatic license plate readers scan every car that passes by. Not just people doing something suspicious. Not people involved in a case. Everyone. That includes me driving to campus, heading to my internship, running errands around High Point, or even just going to get food with friends. All those little moments — the ones I don’t think twice about — can end up stored in a database somewhere.
And the part that sticks with me is how long that information can sit there. Months. Sometimes years. Even if I’ve done absolutely nothing wrong.
It makes me think about how much someone could piece together about my life just from those scans. They could see what time I usually leave for class. When I get home. How often I go to the station. What neighborhoods I drive through. Patterns I don’t even notice about myself.
As someone who’s studying journalism and sports media, that hits differently. I’m learning how important it is to protect sources, protect people’s privacy, and understand the systems that shape our communities. But at the same time, I’m part of a system that’s tracking me without ever asking for my permission. It’s strange to realize how normal it’s become to be monitored without even realizing it.
And honestly, it makes me think about safety in a more complicated way. I want police to have the tools they need to keep people safe — of course I do. But I also don’t want my entire routine stored somewhere “just in case.” I don’t want my movements to become data points that could be misinterpreted or used in ways I never agreed to.
Crump’s talk made me realize that privacy isn’t just some abstract idea. It’s personal. It’s about the freedom to move through the world without feeling like someone is building a file on you. It’s about having control over your own story — something I care about deeply, both as a person and as a future journalist.
And the truth is, most of us don’t even know this is happening. We don’t see the cameras. We don’t get a notification. We don’t get a choice. But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t affect us.
If anything, it affects us more because we’re not paying attention.








