Saturday, July 7, 2018
Really? How Did You Know that?
Every
once and a while, I like to remind everybody that you cannot always believe
your eyes, virtually nothing that you do involving any form of electronic
communications tool is private, and if you live anywhere where cameras are
installed, facial recognition software goes well beyond simply identifying you.
For
example, in my May 24th blog, I Have Absolute Proof!, I delve into the rapidly
evolving world of fake audio-videos, where very credible images of real people
are digitally manipulated, with genuine-sounding words from the speaker
carefully remastered and reworked. As artificial intelligence – very accessible
to the world's sophisticated intelligence agencies – is applied to cataloged
videos and voice recordings, you can get Barak Obama to admin "on
camera" that he was born in Kenya, Donald Trump to tell you he lusts after
his elder daughter and Robert Mueller to explain why his entire effort is
indeed a "fake news witch hunt."
The
resulting images are incredibly powerful, even they are entirely false and
completely manufactured. But give a conspiracy theorist Web access to the right
video... and try and convince him or her that this was a manufactured and very
false product. Give that same conspiracy theorist a video that contradicts
his/her view, and watch them label that as "fake."
With
a GPS chip in your very own smart phone, police departments can track
everywhere you have been, as long as that phone was turned on. It may require a
warrant now, but they can check alibis easily. They can aggregate your
financial data, medical records, driving record, any form of digital
information transmitted across phone lines or the Web or through mobile cell
towers. They know what is in your texts, emails and on your social media. They
can add facial recognition camera images to place you anywhere a linked camera
has photographed your face. Want more? See my May 4th blog, We Know What You Did Last Summer… and Every Day of Your Life, for the nasty
details.
Artificial
intelligence – using super-high-speed computers with massive data storage
capacity – is capable of taking all of that massive private information and
interpreting nuances and creating inferences that are downright scary. AI also
"learns" as it goes, perhaps generating more intrusive analysis
without anyone instructing the computer to do so. Personal "profiles"
are easily created to categorize who you are, what your political beliefs are,
what you feel … penetrating fleeting moments in your life to generate detailed
"assumptions" about who you are. State agencies, credit agencies,
marketers and other folks who really have no business with that information
will develop profiles on you to assess risks, seek vulnerabilities and prepare
manipulative messages based on your behavior.
There
are digital billboards that can assess age, race and general appearance as you
pass by... to change their messaging to appeal to you. As the software develops
more, they will know it's you with even more tailored messages. Oh yeah!
And if you think that's bad, try this little technology in China that just
might (not) terrify you.
The
July 4th Los Angeles Times explains: "When facial recognition
cameras were installed at a century-old high school here in eastern China, students
got in and out of campus, picked up lunch, borrowed books and even bought
drinks from a vending machine just by peering into the cameras... No more
worrying about forgetting to carry your ID card.
"But
in March, the cameras appeared in some classrooms — and they did a lot more
than just identify students and take attendance... Using the latest artificial
intelligence software, the devices tracked students’ behavior and read their
facial expressions, grouping each face into one of seven emotions: anger, fear,
disgust, surprise, happiness, sadness and what was labeled as neutral... Think
of it as a little glimpse of the future.
"While
American schools, as well as students and parents, are worrying about the
increased emphasis on standardized tests — and the loss of classroom freedom
that comes with “teaching to the test” — China has carried things to a whole
new level.
"Here,
the surveillance cameras took the data on individual facial expressions and
used that information to create a running 'score' on each student and class. If
a score reached a predetermined point, the system triggered an alert. Teachers
were expected to take action: to talk to a student perceived to be disengaged,
for example, or overly moody.
"School
administrators reckoned the data could provide feedback for teachers as well,
about their lectures and classroom management, though they spoke of no
immediate plans to use those details as part of their evaluations.
"Most
students came to hate the constant monitoring — and the consequences that
followed when the machines reported scores suggesting individuals or entire
classes weren’t paying attention.
Some
students went so far as to figure out how to game the system by feigning what
the cameras’ designers wanted to see... 'If you feel angry, you need to control
yourself,' said Zhu Juntao, 17, using his two forefingers to press up the ends
of his mouth, as if smiling. He says he was never called out by a teacher, but
others were." How could such software possible be used the wrong way? What
could possibly go wrong, go wrong, go wrong, go wrong, go wrong...???
I'm Peter Dekom, and even George Orwell
could not have possibly envisioned this level of personal intrusion by the
state!!
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