participatory panopticon
n. An all-encompassing system of surveillance created by the people being watched through their use of mobile technologies and trackable transactions.
Examples
2013
This is pretty much a spot-on manifestation of the next phase of the Participatory Panopticon. The first phase used cameraphones — ubiquitous and useful, to be sure, but reactive: you had to take it out and do something to make it record. A cameraphone isn't a tool of a panopticon in your pocket. But a wearable system, particularly something that looks stylish and not "tech," leads to very different kinds of outcomes.
—Jamais Cascio, “Google Glass: a wearable heads-up display and camera,” Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies, February 23, 2013
2011
A voluntary or 'participatory' Panopticon differs from older systems of surveillance in that it is consensual. People willingly participate in the monitoring of their own behavior.
—Lee Humphreys, “Who's Watching Whom? A Field Study of Interactive Technology & Surveillance,” Journal of Communication, August 04, 2011
1999 (earliest)
The strength of this new Panopticon is that people tend to participate voluntarily because they see positive bene?ts from participation, and are less likely to perceive disadvantages or threats….

The participatory Panopticon spreads its gaze seductively, yet insidiously. ATMs are a convenience, allowing one to do banking business at one’s own expedience. Telephone and on-line banking offer even greater convenience, permitting financial transactions from one’s home at any hour, any day.
—Reginald Whitaker, “The End of Privacy,” New Press, February 01, 1999
Notes
With every casual swipe, tomorrow's democratic citizens are being conditioned to live in tomorrow’s voluntary panopticon.
—David Shenk, “Watching You,” National Geographic, November 01, 2003