How to Secure Your Home Without Trusting the Illusion of Five Stars
“But look at the photo of the cat,” Sarah said, her voice echoing slightly in the half-empty kitchen. “People don’t leave five-star reviews if their cat gets weirded out by a stranger. This woman has three hundred reviews, Daniel. Three hundred.”
Daniel didn’t look up. He was sitting at the small breakfast bar, his shoulders hunched. “I’m not worried about the cat, Sarah. I’m worried about the lock on the back window that sticks, and the fact that we’re giving a key code to someone whose last name I don’t even know. ‘Jessica P.’ isn’t a person. It’s a profile.”
“It’s a verified profile,” Sarah countered.
“Verified by who? A social media login? A credit card that cleared? That’s not a background check. That’s just proof she exists and has a bank account. It doesn’t tell me if she’s the one actually showing up, or if the platform just sent the nearest available body.”
This is the modern impasse. We live in an era where we have outsourced our most intimate safety decisions to the wisdom of the crowd, as if a thousand strangers’ pleasant experiences can somehow act as a physical barrier against our own misfortune. It is a strange, digital sort of faith. We trust the aggregated opinion of people we will never meet more
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