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Here, visitors can browse Mark Zuckerberg's data as demonstrated in our interactive demo. The glass would have a layer that could be projected on, allowing an overlay of information that could be controlled and navigated from the kiosk, yet visible to anyone in the space, leaving opportunities to see interesting data that might not be individually searched for.

After that, viewers can look at the impact of social media at a global scale. Two thin scrims have interesting data projected onto them, ever changing. Viewers might be able to get a glimpse at how many posts have been put on Facebook, how many hours are spent on social media per day on average or globally in a 24-hour span, or maybe how much information is uploaded per hour.

Finally, users who've downloaded the app can go to the reflection kiosk, where they can look at the same data they've look at for Mark Zuckerberg, but this time focused on them. The kiosk combs through the user's available data to illustrate just how much corporations know about each of us, displaying things like Google's location data or Facebook's user-specific advertiser profile. Ideally, the user walks away from the experience shaken and disturbed, pushing the importance of data security.


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