Global geopolitics

Decoding Power. Defying Narratives.


Our World Has Been Turned Into A Digital Panopticon

A new documentary from Oracle Films highlights how governments and corporations are expanding digital surveillance infrastructure under environmental and public safety policies. Former tech executive Aman Jabbi outlines how this system is being built without public debate, and what it means for personal freedom.

Jabbi describes how smart cities use interconnected technologies to track people at all times. Devices in the home, from TVs to thermostats, collect data continuously. Vehicles report location data. Phones, watches, and other wearable tech provide round-the-clock tracking, even when people are on foot. These systems are already in place. They work silently, and most of the time people do not realize they’re being monitored.

The goal, according to Jabbi, is to centralize and automate population control using environmental monitoring as justification. Air quality sensors are used to restrict travel. Traffic systems double as movement control. Smart water systems are set up for rationing. Noise monitors can be tied to speech surveillance. Smart meters control energy access. All of this data feeds into centralized platforms that use artificial intelligence to detect and respond to human behavior in real time.

Jabbi says the next phase is geofencing. This means setting digital borders that a person cannot cross without triggering restrictions. These systems link to facial recognition, digital ID, and programmable currency. If someone steps outside their designated zone, their digital access can be cut. That includes spending, mobility, and possibly even basic services. The software already exists, and trials are underway in various cities worldwide.

Under this model, mobility becomes conditional. Energy use becomes conditional. Every aspect of daily life becomes linked to digital systems that can be changed or revoked by administrators. The goal is not efficiency or climate protection. It is automation of compliance.

Smart cities are marketed as sustainable and convenient. But they rely on constant surveillance and data extraction. What people are being told is not what is being built. Once in place, the system is difficult to challenge or exit. Digital identity, digital money, and movement restrictions make it nearly impossible to operate outside of the network.

The documentary warns that the systems are being introduced under policy labels that sound positive. But the function is control. Jabbi calls it a digital panopticon, an all-seeing system designed to monitor, manage, and restrict behavior. This is not theory. These technologies are real, operational, and expanding. People need to understand what is being constructed before it becomes permanent.

Direct Quote per Aman Jabbi :

“Your devices at home, and all smart appliances are monitoring everything all the time.”

“When you leave your home, your automobile is being tracked all the time.”

“They are tracking all the devices on you, from smartphones to smartwatches, when you’re walking on the streets.”

“So data is being collected 24/7, continuously on every human being.”

“The plan is to pretty much lock up humanity in smart cities, which is kind of a superset of a 15-minute city.”

“Air monitoring is really about limiting mobility and no car ownership. Water management is about water rationing. Noise pollution is about speech surveillance. Traffic monitoring is about limiting mobility. Energy conservation is all about rationing heat, electricity, and gasoline.”

“Another concept one should be familiar with is called geofencing. Think of it as an invisible fence around you, where you cannot go beyond a certain point. And that will be related to your face recognition, digital identity, and access control. Software can turn off your digital currency beyond a certain point from your house.”

“Our world has been turned into a digital panopticon.”

We are being locked live into a digital prison, no reasons given.

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