23 March 2018

Hello Who??? Inter-Active Art Sham > The City of Mesa Wants To Grab Your Data


Believe it or not, dear readers, YOU ARE A WALKING GOLDMINE OF DATA - Information about you that cities and for-profit companies want to use whether you know it or not, with or without your consent. SERIOUSLY, Folks! . . . Beware of schemes like this!
Like most things, Downtown Mesa is way behind-the-curve in schemes of any kind to resuscitate, to re-develop, to re-imagine, or to re-generate the distressed 'Old Donut-Hole".
If Downtown Mesa is to be eligible for new investor tax credits then it's got to get classified as a neglectedblighted, and low-income area for both 'Opportunity Zones" and Redevelopment Areas (RDA) by the Mesa Office of Economic Development. Vibrant? No. Distressed? Yes.
"The Rise of Mesa's Innovation District"? When Mesa Mayor John Giles has admitted that
City planners had no idea what they were doing for years. Whoa!
Has anything changed when we have the same of characters who want to transform DTMesa their way, even after a successive history of failures and half-baked Pie-In-The-Sky schemes like $75,000 spent on proposals for City Center and a $150M bogus Bond for an ASU satellite campus here - with no alternatives presented except for their only one > ASU. _________________________________________________________________________
If anything can happen here at all here in Mesa, everyone needs to be invited to the table and interact with people at all levels. Citizens - the people who live here in Mesa - are simply not engaged and not involved in urban planning,in spite of an over-hyped Imagine Mesa campaign handled by a third-party, with foregone conclusions. Now we get the Hello Lamp Post project - to interact via text message with inanimate objects at the same time grabbing all your data.
Lamp posts, bus stops, benches, tables and other city objects have something to say - all coded and programmed to capture data when you use your 'Smartphone'. 32 total objects like lampposts, benches, newspaper boxes, public art, sculptures and the Mesa Arts Center building are given individual mobile phone codes allowing them to interact with anyone who texts them.
That's exclusionary for people who do not own or use smartphones.
How will the city - and other un-named institutions - use YOUR DATA from texting to inanimate objects?
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. . . it will help them think about how they will respond to what they call "our community's desires" ?????? (How about the plural communities?)
According to an article by East Valley Tribune go-to reporter Wayne Schutsky, " The objects initially will be preloaded with basic knowledge about themselves and the area to share with users. They will accumulate more information over time as more people interact with them.
What's missing  in the picture? People!
In addition to providing visitors with information, the objects also will gather feedback about what users would like to see from downtown organizations.
The objects will “collect input from the public about how they feel about art in Mesa and downtown to gather input for our strategic planning,” said Cindy Ornstein, executive director of the Mesa Arts Center. . .
She added, You are helping to inform Mesa Arts Center, Downtown Mesa Association and other institutions with information that will help us think about how we will respond to our community’s desires.”
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ALL THE HYPE: 
3 days ago - Lampposts, park benches and buildings are not typically the best conversationalists, but those inanimate objects will soon come to life in downtown Mesa with the help of the Hello Lamp Post project. The interactive digital art project – which debuted in Bristol, England, in 2013 and has since made its way...
https://www.facebook.com/CityofMesa/posts/10156213006194393
Go talk to a lamp post or a park bench, or maybe even a building in Downtown Mesa, Arizona. No, we're not joking. Mesa Arts Center's latest art...
Hello Lamp Post, a playful work of interactive public art by PAN Studios in London, invites you to pause in your tracks and interact via text message with everyday street objects like lamp posts, benches, buildings and drains. The project, which has only visited one other U.S. city prior to its installation in Mesa, includes 32 ...
Hello Lamp Post, a playful work of interactive public art by PAN Studios in London, invites you to pause in your tracks and interact via text message with everyday street objects like lamp posts, benches, buildings and drains. The project, which has only visited one other U.S. city prior to its installation in Mesa, includes 32 ...
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Hearing voices? Company creates lampposts and bus stops that 'come alive' and can TALK
 
 
 
 

 
 

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