Markets, businesses, groups, and individuals should be regulated and limited differently in the face of diminishing state power and identification and networking of the material world by establishing universal rules, regulations, and responsibilities amidst privacy concerns for civilians. With the constant development and use of technology in our day-to-day lives such as with cars, laptops, and cellular devices, the need for security and increased methods of privacy are even more important. As stated in the text (Verbeeks 217), “Public space will literally become space with a public character—the more it be- comes aware of us, the more we need to become aware of the fact that that is the case.”