With computers passing the Turing test and fooling people into believing they’re real, and Google announcing self-driving cars, it seems like the world is turning to the machines. And as Peter Vogel, a partner at Gardere, points out that means a lack of privacy for those us for who still have blood, and not electricity, coursing through our veins.

Vogel cites a recent article from the New York University Journal of Law and Liberty about privacy, location tracking and machine learning to make his point. The article, he said, described “unsupervised machine learning,” which “automatically finds dependencies, correlations, and clusters in the data without requiring any significant human intervention.”

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