Companies Developing Crowd Analysis Programs To Detect 'Abnormalities' In Behavior And Match Faces Against Giant Databases
from the watching-over-you dept
One of the reasons that the total surveillance programs of the NSA and
GCHQ are possible is that computers continue to become more powerful and
cheaper, allowing ever-more complex analyses to be conducted, including
those that were simply not feasible before. Here's
another example of the kind of large-scale monitoring that is now possible, as reported by Nikkei Asian Review:
NEC announced that it has developed the
world's first crowd behavior analysis technology. Based on the simulated
behavioral patterns exhibited by people in emergencies, the system is
designed to detect any abnormalities in the behavior of congested public
places.
This is very similar to an
EU-funded project called "INDECT":
The primary objective is to develop advanced and
innovative algorithms for human decision support in combating terrorism
and other criminal activities, such as human trafficking, child
pornography, detection of dangerous situations (e.g. robberies) and the
use of dangerous objects (e.g. knives or guns) in public spaces.
Efficient tools for dealing with such situations are crucial to ensuring
the safety of citizens.
Like INDECT, the key justification for the NEC surveillance system is to
"prevent crimes and terrorist attacks". Another Japanese company is
also exploiting the immense power of computer systems to offer blanket
surveillance:
Hitachi Kokusai Electric began marketing a new
surveillance system that can search and identify a target individual by
using an enormous volume of recorded footage from surveillance cameras.
The company extracts facial features of individuals -- including profile
shape, eye size and the shape of a nose bridge -- and stores them in a
database. The system can then compare the features of the person in
question against this data. It can complete the search within one second
using a database of 36 million faces.
This search technology could be used to quickly identify terrorists in
public places. The company said the system could register faces of up to
7 billion people if 50 servers are linked up.
In other words, the claim is that this system could scale up to store
facial features of the entire world. And it's not just the Japanese who
will be making money from spying on you:
EMC of the U.S., a leading information-technology storage
hardware provider, has developed a surveillance system that uses
external storage technology. The system can hold data of up to 20
petabytes by linking up as many as 144 storage devices. This is enough
to store 13 years of continuous footage from 100 cameras.
What's truly frightening about all these systems is that this is just
the beginning. As computers become faster, and storage cheaper, it's
easy to imagine the output from every surveillance device on the planet
being stored forever, and constantly re-analyzed to find those awkward
"abnormalities", AKA individuals...
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