This list, instead, tallies the kind of tracking an average person might encounter on an ordinary day in the United States. Each example has been sourced officially or from a major publication.
Car movements – Every car since 2006 contains a chip that records your speed, braking, turns, mileage, accidents whenever you start your car.
Highway traffic – Cameras on poles and sensors buried in highway record the location of cars by license plates and fast-track badges. Seventy million plates are recorded each month.
Ride-share taxis – Uber, Lyft, and other decentralized rides record your trips.
Long-distance travel – Your travel itinerary for air flights and trains is recorded.
Drone surveillance – Along U.S. borders, Predator drones monitor and record outdoor activities.
Postal mail – The exterior of every piece of paper mail you send or receive is scanned and digitized.
Utilities – Your power and water usage patterns are kept by utilities. (Garbage is not cataloged, yet.)
Cell phone location and call logs – Where, when, and who you call (meta-data) is stored for months. Some phone carriers routinely store the contents of calls and messages for days to years.