statism watch

  • Topicgate

  • Search

  • News Alerts

  • Recent Forum Posts

  • Recent Comments

  •  

    September 2008
    S M T W T F S
    « Aug   Oct »
     123456
    78910111213
    14151617181920
    21222324252627
    282930  
  • Archives

‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise

Share

newscientist.com
September 23, 2008

Last year, New Scientist revealed that the US Department of Homeland Security is developing a system designed to detect “hostile thoughts” in people walking through border posts, airports and public places. The DHS says recent tests prove it works.

Project Hostile Intent as it was called aimed to help security staff choose who to pull over for a gently probing interview – or more.

ommentators slated the idea that sensors could spot people up to no good from their pulse rate, breathing, skin temperature, or fleeting facial expressions. One likened it to the “pre-crime” units that predict criminal behaviour in the movie Minority Report.

However, last week, the DHS science unit gave an update on the project, now dubbed the less-hostile-sounding Future Attribute Screening Technologies (FAST) programme. And, if DHS claims are to be believed, the research appears to be getting somewhere.

At an equestrian centre in Maryland, 140 paid volunteers walked through a pair of trailers kitted out with a battery of FAST sensors, including cameras, infrared heat sensors and an eyesafe laser radar, called a Bio-Lidar, that measures pulse and breathing rate from a distance.

Some subjects were told to act shifty, be evasive, deceptive and hostile. And many were detected. “We’re still very early on in this research, but it is looking very promising,” says DHS science spokesman John Verrico. “We are running at about 78% accuracy on mal-intent detection, and 80% on deception.”

That sounds incredibly high at such an early stage in the research – but only tests on vast quantities of real people, rather than eager volunteers, will present any real test.

Questions remain, however, as to how secure the system is. The machines could reveal health conditions like heart murmurs and breathing problems as well as stress levels – which would be an invasion of privacy.

But Verrico says FAST has been through stringent privacy controls (pdf) and that the data is never matched to a name. It is only used to make decisions about whether to question someone, and then discarded.

The trial technology was installed in a trailer because it is planned to be easily transportable, so that FAST trucks can appear at any sports or music event as required. They look set to become as regular a sight at such events as mobile toilets and catering trucks.

But is going to make a real difference? Or will bad guys learn to play the system and render it another piece of what expert Bruce Schneier dubs “security theatre“.

Given that the FAST approach is not much different to the long established – and long established as unreliable – polygraph, that certainly seems plausible.

Source | See Also: Feds give customs agents free hand to seize travelers’ documents | American Rail Passengers Subject to Random Searches, Police Presence | Ottawa balks at travel permit for man trapped in Sudan | First it’s ‘For the Children’: Microsoft working to ID you online | Global ‘Intelligent Transport’ initiative comes to your cellphone: Location data used to track traffic flow | ‘Environmental volunteers’ will be encouraged to spy on their neighbours | Smith’s Stasi are a menace to freedom | Greyhound bus passengers now subject to arbitrary luggage searches | NYC Residents Furious over Invasive Surveillance Grid | Security officials to scan D.C. area license plates | Beijing Taxis Are Bugged ‘For Driver Safety’ | Edmonton bus terminal ‘wide open’, security needed: ex-security guard | Bombs explode, Washington-based Intelcenter releases yet another terror video, China cracks down on transport security | Troops patrolling Italian cities alongside police | Eye scans, fingerprints to control NZ borders | Turning Toronto into a nanny state | TTC officers won’t carry Tasers, guns | Papers Please: UK cops stopping millions in street | Police to demand blood, urine at roadside stops | Armed Police to Roam Toronto High Schools | Air passengers to undergo ‘virtual strip search’ | Berlusconi puts 2,500 troops on streets of Italian cities to patrol alongside police | Ottawa Proposes Band-Aid ‘Bill of Rights’ for Airline Travellers | Pistol Pendant Causes Airport Holdup | US Homeland Security Keen on ‘Novel’ Israeli Airport Security Technology | Tanks, Face-Scanning Cameras Part of ‘Discreet’ 2010 Games Security | $4 Million Earmarked for Cameras, “Respect” at Toronto Schools | Vancouver Olympics security cameras raise privacy concerns | American Border Officers Want to Fingerprint Canadians at SPP Bridge | Machine Gun-Toting Officers To Patrol NYC Subway | Airport scanner a ‘virtual strip search’ | U.S. to collect DNA at border | TTC studies using Tasers | CBC Radio Broadcasts Expose of North American Police State

Bookmark and Share

25 Responses to “‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise”

  1. statism watch » Blog Archive » Radical change needed in privacy protection, Ont. watchdog says Says:

    [...] | See Also under Surveillance: ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Was Canada’s Privacy Commissioner targeted for opposition to intrusive security policies? |  [...]

  2. statism watch » Blog Archive » Army Orders Pain Ray Trucks; New Report Shows ‘Potential for Death’ Says:

    [...] America Over Bailout Bill | American Rail Passengers Subject to Random Searches, Police Presence | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Frequent school lockdowns raise questions | Secret killing program is key in Iraq, Woodward says [...]

  3. statism watch » Blog Archive » Police will use new device to take fingerprints in street, vendors say face scanning next Says:

    [...] into “Constitution-Free Zone” | Interpol wants facial recognition database to catch suspects | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Feds give customs agents free hand to seize travelers’ documents | American Rail Passengers [...]

  4. Pre-crime Detector? Domain of scary Sci-Fi no longer? | Blogspots Says:

    [...] Attribute Screening Technology currently under development by the US Homeland Security Department. FAST is being developed to run a set of tests on a subject at a distance to check facial movements and [...]

  5. statism watch » Blog Archive » Halifax thinks again about subjecting applicants to lie-detector tests Says:

    [...] to catch suspects | | UK Shortly to Become Worse Surveillance Society than Stasi East Germany | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Feds give customs agents free hand to seize travelers’ documents | American Rail Passengers [...]

  6. statism watch » Blog Archive » Private firm may administer UK surveillance database Says:

    [...] than Stasi East Germany | Feds give customs agents free hand to seize travelers’ documents | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | American Rail Passengers Subject to Random Searches, Police Presence | Troops in the Streets: [...]

  7. statism watch » Blog Archive » Toronto School Board to ‘review’ The Handmaid’s Tale on one parent’s complaint Says:

    [...] to be deported | Tasering of mom with baby ‘necessary’ in order to take child, police say | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | India’s use of brain scans in courts dismays critics | Comedian begins asking Harper question, [...]

  8. statism watch » Blog Archive » New Legislation Authorizes FEMA Camps In U.S. Says:

    [...] America Over Bailout Bill | American Rail Passengers Subject to Random Searches, Police Presence | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Frequent school lockdowns raise questions | Secret killing program is key in Iraq, Woodward says [...]

  9. statism watch » Blog Archive » Queen’s silences campus language-police program Says:

    [...] to be deported | Tasering of mom with baby ‘necessary’ in order to take child, police say | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | India’s use of brain scans in courts dismays critics | Comedian begins asking Harper question, [...]

  10. statism watch » Blog Archive » US Democrats Introduce Public National Service Bills Says:

    [...] to be deported | Tasering of mom with baby ‘necessary’ in order to take child, police say | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | India’s use of brain scans in courts dismays critics | Comedian begins asking Harper question, [...]

  11. statism watch » Blog Archive » UK: Civil servants attacked for using anti-terror laws to spy on public Says:

    [...] than Stasi East Germany | Feds give customs agents free hand to seize travelers’ documents | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | American Rail Passengers Subject to Random Searches, Police Presence | Troops in the Streets: [...]

  12. statism watch » Blog Archive » UK police maintain databank on thousands of protesters Says:

    [...] than Stasi East Germany | Feds give customs agents free hand to seize travelers’ documents | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | American Rail Passengers Subject to Random Searches, Police Presence | Troops in the Streets: [...]

  13. statism watch » Blog Archive » Atlas felt a sense of déjà vu Says:

    [...] to be deported | Tasering of mom with baby ‘necessary’ in order to take child, police say | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | India’s use of brain scans in courts dismays critics | Comedian begins asking Harper question, [...]

  14. statism watch » Blog Archive » Researchers use brain scans to read people’s memories Says:

    [...] Halifax thinks again about subjecting applicants to lie-detector tests | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | India’s use of brain scans in courts dismays critics | Brain will be battlefield of future, [...]

  15. statism watch » Blog Archive » Pentagon exploring robot killers that can fire on their own Says:

    [...] America Over Bailout Bill | American Rail Passengers Subject to Random Searches, Police Presence | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Frequent school lockdowns raise questions | Secret killing program is key in Iraq, Woodward says [...]

  16. statism watch » Blog Archive » Top court to decide whether trash is private Says:

    [...] Ont. watchdog says | Feds give customs agents free hand to seize travelers’ documents | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Was Canada’s Privacy Commissioner targeted for opposition to intrusive security policies? | [...]

  17. statism watch » Blog Archive » Surveillance plane tagged wrong car, seized for street racing, woman says Says:

    [...] [...]

  18. statism watch » Blog Archive » Mother who smacked son, 8, with hairbrush is forced to give him up to social services Says:

    [...] to be deported | Tasering of mom with baby ‘necessary’ in order to take child, police say | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | India’s use of brain scans in courts dismays critics | Comedian begins asking Harper question, [...]

  19. statism watch » Blog Archive » Iraq Marks Withdrawal of U.S. Troops From Cities Says:

    [...] [...]

  20. statism watch » Blog Archive » Whole-body airport scanners are basically safe—or are they? Says:

    [...] full-body scans at airports | Interpol wants facial recognition database to catch suspects | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Eye scans, fingerprints to control NZ borders | Air passengers to undergo ‘virtual strip [...]

  21. statism watch » Blog Archive » UK: Airline passengers have ‘no right’ to refuse naked body scanners Says:

    [...] full-body scans at airports | Interpol wants facial recognition database to catch suspects | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Eye scans, fingerprints to control NZ borders | Air passengers to undergo ‘virtual strip [...]

  22. statism watch » Blog Archive » Australia to fingerprint, face-scan visitors from Muslim nations Says:

    [...] vendors say face scanning next | Interpol wants facial recognition database to catch suspects | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Billboards that look back | Saskatchewan adopting US-mandated ID card, to include RFID chip, [...]

  23. statism watch » Blog Archive » Mind-reading experiment uses brain scans to eavesdrop on thoughts Says:

    [...] read people’s memories | Halifax thinks again about subjecting applicants to lie-detector tests | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | India’s use of brain scans in courts dismays critics | Brain will be battlefield of future, [...]

  24. statism watch » Blog Archive » ‘Naked’ scanners may increase cancer risk Says:

    [...] full-body scans at airports | Interpol wants facial recognition database to catch suspects | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Eye scans, fingerprints to control NZ borders | Air passengers to undergo ‘virtual strip [...]

  25. statism watch » Blog Archive » Australia recording features for facial recognition Says:

    [...] vendors say face scanning next | Interpol wants facial recognition database to catch suspects | ‘Pre-crime’ detector shows promise | Billboards that look back | Saskatchewan adopting US-mandated ID card, to include RFID chip, [...]

Leave a Reply