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Explanation
In this comic, a couple is sitting on a couch when the man enthusiastically proposes a surveillance dystopia as if it were a consumer convenience. He suggests it would be cool if computers listened to everything, tracked his movements, read his facial expressions, and made recommendations based on all that data. His partner flatly responds "No. Never." to the idea, treating it as the obvious privacy nightmare it is.
The next panel reveals that this exact dystopian scenario is being marketed as a feature of "new household robots," which the salesman claims "you're gonna love." The final panel's caption -- "God bless this customer-oriented dystopia" -- drives home the satire. The comic points out that the always-on surveillance features people would reject if described honestly are the same features tech companies cheerfully market as helpful smart home products. The humor lies in the contrast between how horrifying the concept sounds when stated plainly versus how readily it is accepted when packaged as a consumer product.