Do people want to adjust every aspect of their lives to deal with people recording them on video at all time
People should because in many ways this is already happening. Go to a social gathering, or a public event, and you are being recorded, probably from multiple vantage points, through the duration.
But let's say that we're talking about a friend -- assuming that they wanted to record you (the simple existence of a camera aside), they are recording their experience that happens to include you. Selfish notions that one has a bubble of exclusion seems quaint and a little odd.
I just don't think it's such a big deal. At all. Do you get paranoid and panicky whenever anyone pulls out a smartphone, with which they could ostensibly be recording you? For that matter their keychain, or countless other products, can actually be video recording devices.
"...they are recording their experience that happens to include you. Selfish notions that one has a bubble of exclusion seems quaint and a little odd."
This does not match my experience of personal interaction at all.
I suspect that viewpoint is in a very tiny minority.
> Go to a social gathering, or a public event, and you are being recorded, probably from multiple vantage points, through the duration.
As I'm not a celebrity and most of these events are dinner parties, that would be a huge surprise to me - most of my friends do not record video at all.
The backlash will be considerable. Surveillance/counter-surveillance against wearable computing devices will probably be the next big arms race between hackers and the tech that allows it to happen.
Do people want to adjust every aspect of their lives to deal with people recording them on video at all times?