Both Jill Walker Rettberg and Eli Pariser reveal that technology gives us a false sense of control and hides the truth from majority of users. Rettberg explains how productivity and apps that track your everyday behaviour, like eating and exercise come across are helpful, but in reality these devices only offer what the owner of that app chooses to prioritize, and also tracks users data. Similarly, Pariser warns that algorithms on trending social media apps like google and facebook filter the information we see to match what we already believe. In both cases, technology seems to help validate our current opinions but really it limits what we see and how we think. These are called filter bubbles, the algorithm filters content that is beyond our interests. Our identities become shaped by data, either through numbers that claim to represent our habits or through feeds that reflect our past clicks. What connects both arguments is the danger of trusting technology too much. When we rely...