Across
- 3. What Greenwald says his work is mainly focused on: the condition of keeping one's actions, information, and choices safe from outside scrutiny.
- 5. An expressive action people do freely when they believe they are alone and unobserved.
- 7. The deep discomfort and embarrassment shown on someone's face when they are caught in a private act.
- 8. The role the internet was once praised for: allowing people new freedoms and opportunities.
- 9. A state of being alone, unobserved, where actions are performed without others watching.
- 10. The way in which someone acts or conducts oneself, especially towards others.
Down
- 1. A process or state where the internet enabled broader participation and equality, now contrasted with its new surveillance role.
- 2. A global network that was once seen as a tool of openness and freedom but is now described as a zone of surveillance.
- 4. Describes surveillance that is not targeted but affects everyone, as Greenwald says the internet has become.
- 5. The powerful emotion, described by Glenn Greenwald, that someone feels when caught doing something privately and unexpectedly seen by others.
- 6. To secretly watch or observe someone without their knowing, as in the person unexpectedly seeing another in the passage's anecdote.
