The Secrets of Silicon Valley
Silicon Valley has stood as the central hub of technological innovation for many decades. Located in the San Francisco Bay area, this picturesque region has been home to Google, Facebook, Apple and countless other companies who have shaped the world through innovation. According to The Secrets of Silicon Valley, the provocative documentary from the Corbett Report, this appealing veneer is little more than a smokescreen that hides a massive conspiracy in plain sight. From the perspective of these filmmakers, Big Tech means big trouble.
Hiding underneath is a shadowy underworld where global surveillance is king and personal freedoms are compromised. They're the real intelligence arm of the United States government, and their innovations have aided in the surveillance of our every conversation, purchase and social media encounter. Their end game is nothing short of the destruction of our privacy, the manipulation of our behaviors, and the ability to wield complete control over our lives.
This view may seem unduly apocalyptic to some, but the film anchors its theories on a long and detailed history of the region. Silicon Valley was essentially founded by Frederick Terman in the aftermath of World War II. This learned professor and electrical engineer was a major advisor to the each branch of the U.S. military, and supported their research efforts through the Stanford Research Institute. As detailed in the film, Terman's contributions get decidedly murkier and more nefarious from there.
The filmmakers explore many additional avenues of suspicion, including the birth of the internet, the ties between the Oracle software company and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the contracts shared between Google and the National Security Agency (NSA), and the parallel ascents of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). The film's narrative paints a complex collaboration between individual billionaires, tech corporations, and secret government agencies. This includes a wealth of meticulously researched and seemingly well-sourced information that may impress even the most fervent skeptic.
The Secrets of Silicon Valley isn't necessarily hopeful that the tides of this conspiracy can be reversed, but it conveys great urgency in its exposure of their misdeeds.
Directed by: James Corbett
Fantastic nice to know how isinificat we are as a humanbing
Other than to inform and collate what is clearly public information, what is the point of this video. Authorities were steaming open letters long before surveilling the i/net. It's the same process only with different tech. For better or worse, some degree of spying/ eavesdropping/ scrutiny is necessary today where everybody want privacy but freely gives information to social media. Only a fool would think this info would not be manipulated and that the tech would not be used for evil intent. So, all governments should sit back and not at least scrutinise what passes on these 'free-for-all' systems ?? 'Big Brother' is a natural bedfellow of 'Big Freedom'. Democracy is not an absolute. And surely there must be some constraints, even if it's only traffic lights.
This was epic!
Funny: subscribing to the CorbettReport newsletter means your data goes unencrypted through the Google mailverifier... :)
Funny too: Seems interested in digital privacy, yet overlooks usage of temp email addresses when subscribing to online newsletters.
Corbett it is great , and truth, excellent video report.....
Corbett is awesome!
I highly recommend James Corbett on every level. Excellent Reporting, Journalism & documentation of historical facts. An excellent patriot for truth & integrity. This should be how your mainstream news should report & document.
his documentary series
The James Corbett Report & his films have been an oasis of reality in this era of "Alternative Fact" based nonsense.
"how Big Oil took over the world " & Why Big Oil took over the world - has such clarity and precision, it put a slow on my roll of watching documentaries for a while. I can't wait to watch this one a few times.