People often ask this rhetorically, but rhetorical questions are sometimes fun to answer because sometimes they're rhetorical for the wrong reason - we don't accept the right answer.
I'd guess it's when the surveillance directly harms ~20% of normal people, directly harms an indiscriminate minority of ~5% of people, ie affects many politically powerful people, or in some other way interferes with a government's political and financial incentives.
My 20% number is pulled out of nowhere, but I'd guess that's the number of normal people that'd need to be affected by a single issue to alter a political outcome.
5% is based on LGB surveys. LGB rights continue to show up in political conversations despite a small number of people being affected by LGB policy. I'm guessing it's because folks are LGB at random and politicians are also affected by infringing on LGB rights.
Realistically, when do you think it ends? Does it ever? What motivates political change?
This post was motivated by a description of Project Atlas that I found on bird app.
Data is super valuable
Logical Reasoning
People know
Easy to Govern right now
What's Next
My money is on us living in our sovereign bubble for a few decades yet...