Big Brother
is watching us all
BBC | Sept. 15, 2007
By Humphrey
Hawksley
The US and UK
governments are developing increasingly sophisticated gadgets to
keep individuals under their surveillance. When it comes to
technology, the US is determined to stay ahead of the game.
"Five nine, five
ten," said the research student, pushing down a laptop button to
seal the measurement. "That's your height."
"Spot on," I said.
"OK, we're freezing you now," interjected another student, studying
his computer screen. "So we have height and tracking and your gait
DNA".
"Gait DNA?" I interrupted, raising my head, so inadvertently my full
face was caught on a video camera.
"Have we got that?" asked their teacher Professor Rama Challapa. "We
rely on just 30 frames - about one second - to get a picture we can
work with," he explained.
Tracking individuals
I was at Maryland University just outside Washington DC, where
Professor Challapa and his team are inventing the next generation of
citizen surveillance.
They had pushed back furniture in the conference room for me to walk
back and forth and set up cameras to feed my individual data back to
their laptops.
Gait DNA, for example, is creating an individual code for the way I
walk. Their goal is to invent a system whereby a facial image can be
matched to your gait, your height, your weight and other elements,
so a computer will be able to identify instantly who you are.
"As you walk through a crowd, we'll be able to track you," said
Professor Challapa. "These are all things that don't need the
cooperation of the individual."
Since 9/11, some of the best scientific minds in the defence
industry have switched their concentration from tracking nuclear
missiles to tracking individuals such as suicide bombers.
Surveillance society
My next stop was a Pentagon agency whose headquarters is a drab
suburban building in Virginia. The Defence Advanced Research
Projects Agency (Darpa) had one specific mission - to ensure that
when it comes to technology America is always ahead of the game.
Its track record is impressive. Back in the 70s, while we were
working with typewriters and carbon paper, Darpa was developing the
internet. In the 90s, while we pored over maps, Darpa invented
satellite navigation that many of us now have in our cars.
"We ask the top people what keeps them awake at night," said its
enthusiastic and forthright director Dr Tony Tether, "what problems
they see long after they have left their posts."
"And what are they?" I asked.
He paused, hand on chin. "I'd prefer not to say. It's classified."
"All right then, can you say what you're actually working on now."
"Oh, language," he answered enthusiastically, clasping his fingers
together. "Unless we're going to train every American citizen and
soldier in 16 different languages we have to develop a technology
that allows them to understand - whatever country they are in -
what's going on around them.
"I hope in the future we'll be able to have conversations, if say
you're speaking in French and I'm speaking in English, and it will
be natural."
"And the computer will do the translation?"
"Yep. All by computer," he said.
"And this idea about a total surveillance society," I asked. "Is
that science fiction?"
"No, that's not science fiction. We're developing an unmanned
airplane - a UAV - which may be able to stay up five years with
cameras on it, constantly being cued to look here and there. This is
done today to a limited amount in Baghdad. But it's the way to go."
Smarter technology
Interestingly, we, the public, don't seem to mind. Opinion polls,
both in the US and Britain, say that about 75% of us want more, not
less, surveillance. Some American cities like New York and Chicago
are thinking of taking a lead from Britain where our movements are
monitored round the clock by four million CCTV cameras.
So far there is no gadget that can actually see inside our houses,
but even that's about to change.
Ian Kitajima flew to Washington from his laboratories in Hawaii to
show me sense-through-the-wall technology.
"Each individual has a characteristic profile," explained Ian,
holding a green rectangular box that looked like a TV remote
control.
Using radio waves, you point it a wall and it tells you if anyone is
on the other side. His company, Oceanit, is due to test it with the
Hawaiian National Guard in Iraq next year, and it turns out that the
human body gives off such sensitive radio signals, that it can even
pick up breathing and heart rates.
"First, you can tell whether someone is dead or alive on the
battlefield," said Ian.
"But it will also show whether someone inside a house is looking to
harm you, because if they are, their heart rate will be raised. And
10 years from now, the technology will be much smarter. We'll scan a
person with one of these things and tell what they're actually
thinking."
He glanced at me quizzically, noticing my apprehension.
"Yeah, I know," he said. "It sounds very Star Trekkish, but that's
what's ahead."
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