October 27th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

Surely your remember Project Lantern from back in 2006, right? If you weren’t too fond of that initiative, let’s just say your worst nightmare is coming true. Going forward, every police force in the UK will be equipped with mobile fingerprint scanners, which will allow the fuzz to carry out identity checks right on the street. Dubbed Project Midas, this here setup is supposed to “transform the speed of criminal investigations”while simultaneously freaking out anyone remotely concerned about personal privacy; in fairness, cops insist that fingerprints scanned via these portable devices will not be stored or added to databases, and we’re told that they’ll only be used ” when they suspect an individual of an offense and can’t establish his / her identity.” The £30 million ($47.5 million) to £40 million ($63.4 million) initial phase should hit widespread deployment within 18 months, and in case you thought it was over after this, you should probably know that facial recognition in the field is the next top priority.
[Via Pocket-lint, image courtesy of SpringCard]
UK police to wield mobile fingerprint scanners, facial recognition up next originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Oct 2008 11:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in surveillance, biometrics, fingerprint, security, biometric, police, fingerprint scanner, FingerprintScanner, uk, cops, law, Ident1, MIDAS, Mobile Identification At Scene, MobileIdentificationAtScene | No Comments »
August 12th, 2008 by
Filed under: Digital Cameras, Misc. Gadgets

As the military industrial complex surges forward, so do advances in technology for the public sector. At least that’s how the cold-war wisdom goes. Case in point: QinetiQ is developing a lens-less, mirror-less, battlefield imaging system with some help from your DARPA’s deep pockets. The LACOSTE project (Large Area Coverage Optical Search while Track and Engage) aims to set aloft high-altitude (about 20km) drones and air-ships fitted with a special, thousand-strong microscopic sensor array (a “first of their kind,” according to QinetiQ), a “mask,” and image processor to decode the scene and extract an image of the quickly changing conditions on the battlefield or, you guessed it, city streets. The resulting lightweight and highly-durable system should feature a “super resolution” mode with the ability to “detect and simultaneously track large numbers of moving vehicles in dense urban areas with a high degree of accuracy, 24-hours a day.” And here you thought CCTV was intrusive.
[Via BBC]
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Posted in surveillance, research, military, DARPA, drone, QinetiQ, camera, airship, lacoste | No Comments »
June 4th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

Putting cameras in billboards to measure how many people look at them isn’t a new idea, but it’s starting to get a little more creepily-high-tech, with several advertisers now using facial-recognition software to record things like age and gender. A company called Quividi has supplied camera-equipped ads to McDonald’s in Singapore and Ikea in Europe, and it’s now bringing the tech to the States, where it’s been deployed in New York in ads for A&E’s The Andromeda Strain mini-series and in Philadelphia in train station ads for the Philadelphia Soul. Another company called TruMedia Technologies has supplied similar tech to about 30 locations in the US, including malls in Chesterfield, Missouri, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and Monroeville, Pennsylvania. None of the systems currently record or store video, but no one’s ruling that out as a possibility — and even worse, there’s talk of gathering racial data in an effort to even further target ads. Great, now we have yet another reason to break out the Nixon mask every time we leave the house.
[Via Techdirt]
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Posted in Ads, advertising, surveillance, cctv, billboards | No Comments »
May 8th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Watch out, battery-powered MAVs — your viability could be seriously in danger. Based on a patent application from University of Florida aerospace engineer Subrata Roy, he’s reckoning that a micro air vehicle could be propelled by plasma. Scientists have known that passing a current or magnetic field through a conducting fluid generates a force, but exploiting it for use in moving an aircraft has proven futile thus far. The phenomenon, simply known as magnetohydrodynamics, has typically been tested on larger crafts, but Mr. Roy’s invention would boast a wingspan of less than 15-centimeters and resemble a flying saucer more so than a 747. Of course, this fantastic idea has yet to become much more than just that, but for armed forces and entities obsessed with surveillance, this could undoubtedly be big.
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Posted in patent, university, surveillance, research, plasma, science, patented, air vehicle, AirVehicle, uav, flying saucer, FlyingSaucer, hovering drone, HoveringDrone, magnetohydrodynamics, MAV, saucer | No Comments »
April 25th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Ever peered up in a dimly lit parking lot only to spot a smattering of cameras peering at your every move? Now you too can have such a sophisticated monitoring system right around your own home thanks to QNAP’s NVR-1012. The network surveillance kit is designed to provide “professional grade” live video recording abilities in homes and offices where hoodlums and malefactors tend to linger. The entire system is Linux-based and comes with a single NVR-101 server and a pair of IP cameras; reportedly, the solution is a breeze to install and every recording function can be carried out via an Internet Explorer window. Best of all, you’ll even find 2-way audio capabilities, so you can have a quick chat with any caught-red-handed crooks or mischievous youngsters right before the fuzz / man of the house swarms in for capture. Talk about a thrilling way to spend a Thursday evening.
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Posted in spy, surveillance, security, Qnap, spying, network surveillance, NetworkSurveillance, NVR-1012 | No Comments »
April 11th, 2008 by
Filed under: Digital Cameras
Quite honestly, we can’t imagine anyone finding this the least bit surprising — after all, aren’t CCTV cameras and the UK an inseparable pair by now? Nevertheless, the Examination Officers’ Association across the pond is currently mulling the idea of installing surveillance equipment in exam halls in order to keep an eye on test-taking cheaters. Apparently students are turning to their mobiles more and more (no way!) to plug any holes in their memory, and while the project hasn’t been set in stone just yet, it seems to be headed in that direction. Ah, whatever happened to those old fashioned cram sessions?
[Thanks, Tomek]
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Posted in surveillance, test, cctv, uk, england, cheating, School, big brother, BigBrother, cheat, exam, exam cheating, ExamCheating | No Comments »
March 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: Robots
The University of Michigan’s COM-BAT most definitely isn’t the first mechanical animal to get its inspirations from the bat, but it’s probably the best equipped to play a vital role in modern day warfare. A select group of Wolverines have been blessed with a $10 million grant from the US Army in order to concoct a “six-inch robotic spy plane modeled after a bat [that] would gather data from sights, sounds and smells in urban combat zones and transmit information back to a soldier in real time.” Purportedly, the critter will eventually boast a bevy of sensors, miniature microphones and detectors for picking up nuclear radiation and poisonous gases. Even more interesting, creators are hoping to implement “energy scavenging,” which would enable the bat to stay charged from wind / solar energy along with vibrations and “other sources.” So much for being nocturnal, eh?
[Via UberGizmo]
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Posted in university, spy, surveillance, army, War, military, michigan, battle, spying, bat, COM-BAT, reconnaissance | No Comments »
March 11th, 2008 by
Filed under: Digital Cameras
Finally, all of your boy- and girlhood dreams of X-ray specs are coming to fruition… sort of. A company called ThruVision has pioneered a camera system which is able to peer beneath clothing using teraherz waves (T-waves). Unfortunately for perved-out snoopers, the 80-foot-ranged camera can’t make out “anatomical details,” rather, it can only see materials like plastic, metal, and gels or liquids. The company sees use for the surveillance systems in places like airports or government buildings, where the ever-staring eye of Big Brother is most needed. Still, this is certainly preferable to Total Recall-like X-rays, or those strip searches we keep getting when we travel lately. [Warning: PDF read link]
[Thanks, Justin]
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Posted in surveillance, big brother, BigBrother, t-waves, t5000, teraherz waves, TeraherzWaves, thurvision | No Comments »
February 22nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Not only is the British army hoping to make tanks and troops invisible to the naked eye, but it’ll soon be honing in on targets way before the mind would normally allow. In a $58.8 million deal, Thales UK has been selected to supply the troops with new Surveillance System and Range Finder (SSARF) technologies, which will reportedly “enable quick identification of enemy locations along with the ability to determine the best mortar or artillery firepower the situation on the ground requires.” Best of all, the handheld system will feature integrated GPS, thermal imaging and a five kilometer range, but unfortunately, it won’t be giving any Britons in the field an edge until 2009.
[Via MOD]
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Posted in europe, surveillance, army, uk, military, target, british, locator, JTAS, SSARF, target acquisition, TargetAcquisition | No Comments »
November 1st, 2007 by
Filed under: Cellphones, GPS
It’s not like the Japanese government hasn’t dabbled in GPS (and RFID, too) tracking before, but the nation’s latest idea involving Big Brother is (unsurprisingly) catching a fair amount of criticism. Reportedly, Japan wants to equip senior defense officials with GPS-enabled mobiles, and it’s making no bones about the reasoning behind it. Quite frankly, it’s looking for ways to keep a more watchful eye on officials’ whereabouts after a higher-up was recently “treated to hundreds of expensive rounds of golf by a defense contractor.” Reportedly, the handsets would only be given out to senior staff “required to report for duty in the case of a security emergency,” but a number of anonymous individuals have already expressed disdain for the plan through local news outlets. Nothing to hide, nothing to fear, right?
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in japan, surveillance, tracking, track, Government, big brother, BigBrother, gps phone, GpsPhone, privacy | No Comments »
October 23rd, 2007 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We never thought adding an absurd amount of surveillance cameras to a city (or its public transportation system) would become fashionable, but it seems like Toronto is the next big locale ready to hop on the Big Brother bandwagon. Reportedly, plans are already underway to “ensure every person using Toronto’s transit system will be photographed as of next June,” which means that some 12,000 cameras will have to be installed on “every [Toronto Transit Commission] bus, streetcar, subway car and at each station.” Of course, it’s noted that the images acquired will only be used as “crime-busting tools,” and the entire system is expected to cost a cool $18 million. Good news for employees / police stationed at the transit system’s command center, though — you’ll be able to “view live video or hear audio from any of the security cameras installed on subway cars.” Now that’s quality entertainment.
[Via The Raw Feed]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in surveillance, cctv, canada, cameras, toronto, ttc | No Comments »
October 6th, 2007 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

Computer and behavioral scientists at the University of Buffalo are developing a system that will allow authorities to track faces, voices, bodies and various other biometrical data to create a score for how likely an individual is to commit a terrorist act. Sound like the scariest Big Brother plot since China’s ID card scheme? Well, rest assured, Winston Smith, the researchers only have your best interests in mind. “The goal is to identify the perpetrator in a security setting before he or she has the chance to carry out the attack,” says Venu Govindaraju, professor of computer science and engineering at the university, who was recently awarded $800,000 by the National Science Foundation to create such a system. “We are developing a prototype that examines a video in a number of different security settings, automatically producing a single, integrated score of malfeasance likelihood,” adding that the system will incorporate machine “learning” capabilities, which will allow it to adapt over time. “Human screeners have fatigue and bias, but the machine does not blink,” the researcher said, just before remarking that he was late for an appointment at the Ministry of Truth.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in surveillance, security, learning computers, LearningComputers, terrorism, terrorists, tracking, Venu Govindaraju, VenuGovindaraju, video tracking, VideoTracking | No Comments »
September 25th, 2007 by
Filed under: Storage
We’ve no way of knowing whether Supercircuits’ newly released micro-DVR is actually the “world’s smallest,” but two- x two-inches is mighty minuscule, regardless. The MDVR14UG is designed to be “concealed into the smallest of objects including soda cans, thermostats, clocks, as well as wearable covert gear,” and is reportedly capable of capturing “full resolution” video at 30fps. Moreover, it can be set to record only when motion is detected, controlled with an IR remote, and hardwired for constant power (or receive juice from an optional Li-ion battery pack). The unit records footage directly to an SD flash card and should be available in non-wearable ($250) / wearable ($350) forms real soon.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in dvr, MDVR14UG, spy, supercircuits, surveillance | No Comments »