We are constantly broadcasting emotional data
Recorded: May 30, 2026, 9 p.m.
| Original | Summarized |
Corporations are tracking your emotions and there's nothing you can do about it | Tony RiceAboutPortfolioBlogContactStartupsCorporations are tracking your emotions and there's nothing you can do about itMay 30, 2026I was walking down the street with my cousin and I heard this guy shouting extremely aggressively behind us nearly looking like he was ready to murder someone. As soon as we heard him, neither of us looked back, and we made a point not to look directly at the man. |
The author recounts an experience involving an aggressive encounter on the street, which serves as a springboard for a broader reflection on emotional signaling and corporate surveillance. While walking with a cousin, the author observed an intensely aggressive man, prompting an instinctive response where the author utilized what they describe as "nuerodivergant superpowers" to process numerous environmental signals, ensuring safety. This rapid assessment is attributed to the amygdala's quick response. When the author met the man on the street, the impulsive verbal interaction resulted in an immediate and dramatic shift in the man’s demeanor, transforming his expression from rage to acknowledgement, accompanied by a visible relaxation of facial muscles, suggesting a release of tension. This experience led the author to contemplate the universal nature of emotional data, observing that individuals constantly emit signals and data points through their physical being that others use for judgment, overlaying opinions, ideologies, and beliefs. The narrative posits that just as the man’s physical presence signaled danger, the author’s own body constantly sends forth these signals. A significant theme explored is the long-held societal tendency to conceal, suppress, dismiss, and ignore these inherent emotional signals. The author urges the reader to pause and observe their own feelings, thoughts, and bodily sensations. This personal observation is then connected to the larger issue of corporations tracking emotional insights derived from people. The experience implies that emotional data, much like physical signals, is constantly being broadcast. The implication is that corporations leverage these emotional insights, mirroring how the man on the street’s physical being signaled danger to the author. The underlying message suggests a fundamental tension between the instinct to hide emotional data and the reality of how these signals are perceived and utilized in contemporary society and by large organizations. |