Re: Spooking of neural nets and image recognition...
On Thu, 12 Aug 93 18:02:06 PDT, szabo@netcom.com (Nick Szabo) said:
Are the pictures taken by ATMs good enough for automated recognition? Nick Szabo szabo@netcom.com
Do atm's usually have real cameras? I always figured most of them were fakes.
Mike
I'll comment on both questions. First, Nick's question. Yes, the resolution is sufficient, especially since the faces are right in front of the camera. They're black-and-white (so far, but this will change, and the costs of small surveillance cameras will drop further), and of limited res (probably not full NTSC). But adequate for image recognition (though I've not heard of this being done, just archiving of videotapes for some time period....see the movie "Rising Sun" for some insights). Second, Mike's question. I have no idea what fraction are real cameras, but I suspect many if not most are real. Robberies and killings near ATMs are often accompanied with video footage from the ATMs, shown on television. Some of the cameras may now be dummies, but this will likely change as the costs drop further and as local communities push for more surveillance. (Speculatively, I would not be very surprised to see private companies--banks, convenience stores, daycare centers--forced to install surveillance cameras. Big Brother arrives throught the corporate liability laws? Orwell missed this one, though he got so much of it right.) Comment: The case of banks having cameras doesn't bother me much at all, as the bank already knows exactly who its customers are. That is, the surveillance is not used to gather any information the bank does not already have immediate and complete access to. A much more serious situation will arise when convenience stores, gas stations, and the like adopt the same camera systems--maybe they already are--and begin to compile customer dossiers, purchasing preferences, etc. (Credit card and check purchases are already being used, according to a CNN report I recently saw, to compile such dossiers, so that customers can be sent "customized" advertisements reminding them or making special offers. Cypherpunks can avoid using checks and credit cards, for the time being.) Understand that I don't support bans on such surveillance cameras--it is always my choice to patronize a store--but I do object to situations where the State mandates that stores have cameras or outlaws masks and other efforts to hide one's features. -Tim -- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@netcom.com | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero 408-688-5409 | knowledge, reputations, information markets, W.A.S.T.E.: Aptos, CA | black markets, collapse of governments. Higher Power: 2^756839 | Public Key: by arrangement Note: I put time and money into writing this posting. I hope you enjoy it.
A much more serious situation will arise when convenience stores, gas stations, and the like adopt the same camera systems--maybe they already are--and begin to compile customer dossiers, purchasing preferences, etc. Insofar as monitoring passage of people, I noted a few hours ago a new installation of cameras at the tollbooths on the George Washington Bridge, positioned to be under a meter from people's faces when they stop to fork over their $4.00. The police density at this toll plaza makes additional surveillance of would-be toll booth robbers unnecessary; while traffic analysis on the matching of facial patterns is probably out of their scope right now, it *is* a precedent, and food for thought... (Cameras in concenience stores, BTW, are entirely normal around here. FYI, the George Washington Bridge carries much, probably most, of the traffic into Manhattan and New York City...) andrew m. boardman amb@cs.columbia.edu
Here are some general ideas for "encrypting" one's image: Ear muffs, long hair, etc. (Tim May mentioned ears are good for recognition) Makeup variety Beard variety (mustache, full beard, beatnik, sideburns, etc.) False scars, moles, etc. Variety of hats & eyeglasses Realistic looking masks (available from film or theatre prop/makeup companies?) Gloves (if they start looking at hands, unique jewelry, etc.) Scarves Anything too obvious (ski mask, sunglasses at night, the masks used for the "Wired" cover, etc.) might trigger smart algorithms to red-flag the image. As usual these techniques are popularly reputed to be the special province of criminals. Only a criminal would want to avoid giving the world a dossier on where they shop, travel, withdraw money, etc. right? Alas, that may be right: I suspect only smart criminals and secret agents will go to the expense of doing this stuff; innocent trusting citizens will be the ones building their dossiers for the Security of the State. Nick Szabo szabo@netcom.com
participants (3)
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andrew m. boardman
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szabo@netcom.com
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tcmay@netcom.com