We might hope. But hypocrisy is as old as the hills. We hold people to unrealistic standards; they pretend to meet them.
And there will always be some subset of people who manage to minimize their paper trail -- by never creating it, or destroying it afterwards. (Notably, in Europe, privacy laws seem to be evolving to require sites to take such material down.)
We may wind up giving the most-skillful hypocrites and those with the pull to cover up their private lives even more power over the rest of us.
Or maybe the people who don't have any secrets to hide will be seen as weird and vaguely suspicious, and hence less trustworthy when they try and tell the majority of people to stop doing what the majority of people do all the time.
I dont know how likely that is. As a group humans seem to value idealism and places that on a pedestal while individually failing to meet those standards.
As a group, humans also seem all too eager tear anyone down who seems to achieve perfection. Though this is worse in some cultures, it's present to some extent everywhere.
And there will always be some subset of people who manage to minimize their paper trail -- by never creating it, or destroying it afterwards. (Notably, in Europe, privacy laws seem to be evolving to require sites to take such material down.)
We may wind up giving the most-skillful hypocrites and those with the pull to cover up their private lives even more power over the rest of us.