Acharya Prashant begins by discussing how mobile applications constantly request permissions to access personal data such as calls, photos, videos, messages, and location. He asserts that these requests are not random but are part of a well-thought-out plan. This constant data collection means that someone always knows your whereabouts, the routes you take, your driving style, your purchasing habits, and even who you gift items to. The speaker argues that this leads to the complete erosion of personal and private life, making it impossible to hide. He states, "There is nothing called a personal or a private life... Run if you can, but you will not be able to hide." Responding to a question about the unprecedented wave of Artificial Intelligence, which references books by Yuval Noah Harari and Mustafa Suleyman, Acharya Prashant explains that it will be difficult for a common person to hide from AI. He elaborates that AI functions on big data, and the more visible a person's patterns are, the more predictable and, consequently, more enslavable they become. He illustrates how scattered data points, like a text message, a metro card swipe, a lunch purchase, or a cab booking, are connected by intelligent systems to create a complete story of a person's life, revealing more than they intended to expose. The speaker emphasizes that these systems can infer things you never wanted to be revealed. Acharya Prashant contends that since it's impossible to hide your data patterns, the only way to avoid being exploited is to have nothing to hide. He advises living a "clean," "free and open life," a life of "total nakedness" without guilt or secrets. He warns that if you have any "chinks in your armor," they will be exploited. The choice is stark: either accept slavery or embrace total freedom. The only refuge, he suggests, is an "inward innocence" and an "inward untouchability"—having something within that the world can never touch, co-opt, or enslave.