Steffen: Glad you enjoyed the article. Hope your class has fun discussing it.
Cheers,
Elizabeth
PS Yes, Seattle's great. I miss it still in many ways.
(c) USA TODAY - FINAL - LIFE -
WEDNESDAY - July 24, 2002 - 05D
Surveillance casts an eye
to the future
It looks 'extremely
invasive,' but nothing like 'Minority Report'
By Elizabeth Weise
In the world of 2054, as
portrayed in the summer movie Minority Report, surveillance is a constant presence.
Lasers scan the irises of
subway passengers and automatically deduct their fare. Billboards use the same
technology to recognize passersby and call out to them by name. At one point,
Tom Cruise walks into the Gap after he's paid a black-market surgeon to swap
out his eyes and replace them with someone else's to shield his identity. The
store cheerfully calls out, "Hello Mr. Yakamoto, welcome back to the Gap.
How did those assorted tank tops work out?"
But the real future is unlikely
to be anywhere near that intrusive. Think instead of a gentle dusting of almost
microscopic sensors in everything we use, wear, walk on and drive, all calling
out to each other in a radio whisper we never hear or see but that tracks us
like a mother following a 2-year-old to keep her out of trouble.
"It's going to be
extremely invasive of privacy, but we're going to forget using those words. I
think we'll get used to this stuff in an alarmingly short amount of time,"
says Bruce Sterling, an Austin, Texas, science-fiction writer much in demand by
think tanks to help them imagine and plan for the future.
It's called "ubicomp"
-- ubiquitous computing. The roadway will know when it's icy and caution our
car to slow down on the curves. Our toilet will analyze our urine and notify
our doctor if anything is amiss. When we listen to music, the player will note
each song and quietly deduct a few cents from our account, maybe less if we
allow the record companies to track what we like and don't like for their
marketing plans.
Imagine it as elder care.
"Prosthetic ubicomp," Sterling calls it. Computer scientist Henry
Kautz of the University of Washington in Seattle is already working on it. His
Assisted Cognition Project uses a network of digital devices and wireless
sensors in the walls of homes, in appliances and furniture and clothing. The
devices would work together to monitor an individual, offer prompts when
appropriate and summon help when needed. It will be tested at a
state-of-the-art retirement community in the Portland, Ore., area.
The military and law
enforcement are eager to make use of the latest computer database technologies
to track criminals. Last week the Senate held a hearing on the possibility of
creating a national system of biometric measurement -- using the body to
uniquely identify individuals -- to help in the fight against terrorism.
Federal agents were able to re-create a detailed record of the lives of the
Sept. 11 terrorists by using credit card transactions, phone records and
security-camera tapes.
But it's not just terrorists
who are tracked, and it's not just the government doing the tracking. Already,
gigabytes of information are collected about us every day in databases compiled
by the supermarkets where we shop, our pharmacies, credit card companies and
phone companies.
Convenience vs. privacy
To some extent, the trade-off
for the consumer is between convenience and privacy. Across the country,
drivers can sign up to use palm-sized transponders that automatically deduct
the cost of bridge and highway tolls as they drive. But this means there's a
digital record detailing each time and place their car made the trip. And
customers aren't the ones deciding how the information will be used. In
Southern California, a supermarket used a customer's previous purchasing
records to imply that his fall in a store was caused in part by his heavy
drinking -- documented by what he'd bought with his discount card.
Marc Rotenberg, executive
director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington, D.C., says
last year's Supreme Court ruling that police couldn't use thermal imaging
devices to detect marijuana being raised under grow lamps shows the court
"doesn't plan to abandon the Fourth Amendment even as technology makes
possible new forms of intrusion."
But that was in the home, which
has a special place in U.S. privacy law. Out in public, we're fair game.
Face-recognition software was used to surreptitiously scan everyone who passed
through the turnstiles at the Super Bowl in Tampa. The digitized images were
matched electronically with databases of mug shots of criminals and terrorists.
Similar technology has been tried in Virginia Beach and at airports overseas.
Do the eyes have it?
Computerized iris scanning has
existed since 1994 and has been used at ATMs, in hospitals and airports, but
it's not as easy as Minority Report
suggests.
"One unrealistic thing in
the movie is that the guy is running down the street and the billboards are
identifying him as he goes by," says computer scientist John Daugman of
Cambridge University in England, who invented the computer algorithms for iris
recognition. "You have to be looking at the camera so you pretty much have
to be a cooperative and willing subject."
We're already used to pervasive
tracking of our daily routine online. Web sites immediately identify visitors
based on tiny files called "cookies" placed in their hard drives.
It's these trackers that allow Amazon.com to greet you by name and make
suggestions of books you might like based on your past buying behavior. Though
privacy advocates wail mightily, attempts to legislate privacy have generally
been unable to withstand corporate America's thirst for marketing knowledge
about its customers.
In the movie, murderers are
stopped before they kill by a "pre-crime unit" based on the
predictions of "pre-cogs." Cruise plays Det. John Anderton, who must
run when he's arrested for the future murder of a man he's never met. It's
based on a 1956 short story by Philip K. Dick, one of science fiction's more
dystopian writers.
Dick's work, written at the
height of the Red Scare, was a meditation on the nature of free will, destiny
and whether society has the right to protect itself at the expense of the
individual. And in Dick's story, unlike the movie, there's no happy ending:
Anderton goes to prison for the crime he didn't commit.
Elizabeth Weise
Biotechnology & Nanotechnology
USA Today
2912 Diamond St. #407
San Francisco, CA 94131
415/452-8741