Minority Report: Fiction Has Become Reality
by John W. Whitehead
Recently
by John W. Whitehead: The
Prisoner: ‘I Am Not a Number. I Am a Free Man!’
The
Internet is watching us now. If they want to. They can see what
sites you visit. In the future, television will be watching us,
and customizing itself to what it knows about us. The thrilling
thing is, that will make us feel were part of the medium.
The scary thing is, well lose our right to privacy. An ad
will appear in the air around us, talking directly to us.
~ Steven Spielberg
It was a mere
ten years ago that Steven Spielbergs action film Minority
Report, based on a short story by Philip K. Dick, offered
movie audiences a special effect-laden techno-vision of a futuristic
world in which the government is all-seeing, all-knowing and all-powerful.
And if you dare to step out of line, dark-clad police SWAT teams
will bring you under control.
The year is
2054. The place is Washington, DC. Working in a city in which there
has been no murder committed in six years due in large part
to his efforts combining widespread surveillance with behavior prediction
technologies John Anderton (played by Tom Cruise), Chief of
the Department of Pre-Crime in Washington, DC, uses precognitive
technology to capture would-be criminals before they can do any
damage that is, to prevent crimes before they happen. Unfortunately
for Anderton, the technology, which proves to be fallible, identifies
him as the next would-be criminal, and he flees. In the ensuing
chase, Anderton finds himself not only attempting to prove his innocence
but forced to take drastic measures in order to avoid capture in
a surveillance state that uses biometric data and sophisticated
computer networks to track its citizens.
Seemingly taking
its cue from science fiction, technology has moved so fast in the
short time since Minority Report premiered that what once seemed
futuristic no longer occupies the realm of science fiction. Incredibly,
as the various nascent technologies employed by the government and
corporations alike iris scanners, massive databases, behavior
prediction software, and so on are incorporated into a complex,
interwoven cyber network aimed at tracking our movements, predicting
our thoughts and controlling our behavior, Spielbergs unnerving
vision of the future is fast becoming our reality.
Examples abound.
FICTION:
In Minority Report, police use holographic data screens,
city-wide surveillance cameras, dimensional maps and database feeds
to monitor the movements of its citizens.
REALITY
CHECK: Microsoft, in a partnership with New York City, has developed
a crime-fighting system that will allow police to quickly
collate and visualise vast amounts of data from cameras, licence
plate readers, 911 calls, police databases and other sources. It
will then display the information in real time, both visually and
chronologically, allowing investigators to centralise information
about crimes as they happen or are reported.
FICTION:
No matter where people go in the world of Minority Report,
ones biometric data precedes them, allowing corporations to
tap into their government profile and target them for advertising
based on their highly individual characteristics. So fine-tuned
is the process that it goes way beyond gender and lifestyle to mood
detection, so that while Anderton flees through a subway station
and then later a mall, the stores and billboards call out to him
with advertising geared at his interests and moods. Eventually,
in an effort to outwit the identification scanners, Anderton opts
for surgery to have his eyeballs replaced.
REALITY
CHECK: Google is presently working on context-based advertising
that will use environmental sensors in your cell phone, laptop,
etc., to deliver targeted ads tailored to fit with what youre
seeing and hearing in the real world. However, long before
Google set their sights on context advertising, facial and iris
recognition machines were being employed, ostensibly to detect criminals,
streamline security checkpoints processes, and facilitate everyday
activities. For example, in preparing to introduce such technology
in the United States, the American biometrics firm Global Rainmakers
Inc. (GRI) turned the city of Leon, Mexico into a virtual police
state by installing iris scanners, which can scan the irises of
30-50 people per minute, throughout the city.
Police departments
around the country have begun using the Mobile Offender Recognition
and Information System, or MORIS, a physical iPhone add-on that
allows police officers patrolling the streets to scan the irises
and faces of suspected criminals and match them against government
databases. In fact, by 2014, the FBI plans to launch a nationwide
database of iris scans for use by law enforcement agencies in their
efforts to track criminals.
Corporations,
as well, are beginning to implement eye-tracking technology in their
tablets, smartphones, and computers and the technology is likely
to hit a mass market at least by 2015. It will allow companies to
track which words and phrases the user tends to re-read, hover on,
or avoid, which can give insight into what she is thinking. This
will allow advertisers to expand on the information they glean from
tracking users clicks, searches, and online purchases, expanding
into the realm of trying to guess what a user is thinking based
upon their eye movements, and advertising accordingly. This information
will come in handy for police agencies as well, some of which are
working on developing predictive analysis of blink rates,
pupil dilation, and deception.
In ideal conditions,
facial-recognition software is accurate 99.7 percent of the time.
We are right around the corner from billboards capable of identifying
passersby, and IBM has already been working on creating real world
advertisements that react to people based upon RFID chips embedded
in licenses and credit cards.
FICTION:
In Minority Report, John Andertons Pre-Crime division
utilizes psychic mutant humans to determine when a crime will take
place next.
REALITY
CHECK: The Department of Homeland Security is working on its
Future Attribute Screening Technology, or FAST, which will utilize
a number of personal factors such as ethnicity, gender, breathing,
and heart rate to detect cues indicative of mal-intent.
At least one field test of this program has occurred, somewhere
in the northeast United States.
FICTION:
In Minority Report, government agents use sick
sticks to subdue criminal suspects using less-lethal methods.
REALITY
CHECK: A variety of less-lethal weapons have been developed
in the years since Minority Report hit theaters. In 2007, the Department
of Homeland Security granted a contract to Intelligent Optical Systems,
Inc., for an LED Incapacitator, a flashlight-like device
that emits a dazzling array of pulsating lights, incapacitating
its target by causing nausea and vomiting. Raytheon has created
an Assault Intervention Device which is basically a
heat ray that causes an unbearable burning sensation on its victims
skin. The Long Range Acoustic Device, which emits painful noises
in order to disperse crowds, has been seen at the London Olympics
and G20 protests in Pittsburgh.
FICTION:
A hacker captures visions from the precog Agathas
mind and plays them for John Anderton.
REALITY
CHECK: While still in its infancy, technology that seeks to
translate human thoughts into computer actions is slowly becoming
a reality. Jack Gallant, a neuroscientist at UC Berkeley, and his
research team have created primitive software capable of translating
the thoughts of viewers into reconstructed visual images. A company
named Emotiv is developing technology which will be capable of reading
a users thoughts and using them as inputs for operating machinery,
like voice recognition but with brain signals. Similar devices are
being created to translate thoughts into speech.
FICTION:
In Minority Report, tiny sensory-guided spider robots converge
on John Anderton, scan his biometric data and feed it into a central
government database.
REALITY
CHECK: An agency with the Department of Defense is working on
turning insects into living UAVs, or cybugs. By expanding
upon the insects natural abilities (e.g., bees olfactory
abilities being utilized for bomb detection, etc.), government agents
hope to use these spy bugs to surreptitiously gather vast quantities
of information. Researchers eventually hope to outfit June beetles
with tiny backpacks complete with various detection devices, microphones,
and cameras. These devices could be powered by the very energy produced
by the bugs beating their wings, or the heat they give off while
in flight. There have already been reported sightings of dragonfly-like
robotic drones monitoring protesters aerially in Washington, DC,
as early as 2007.
FICTION:
In Minority Report, Anderton flees his pursuers in a
car whose movements are tracked by the police through the use of
onboard computers. All around him, autonomous, driver-less vehicles
zip through the city, moving people to their destinations based
upon simple voice commands.
REALITY
CHECK: Congress is now requiring that all new cars come equipped
with event data recorders that can record and transmit data from
onboard computers. Similarly, insurance companies are offering discounts
to drivers who agree to have tracking bugs installed. Google has
also created self-driving cars which have already surpassed 300,000
miles of road testing. It is anticipated that self-driving cars
could be on American roads within the next 20 years, if not sooner.
These are but
a few of the technological devices now in the hands of those who
control the corporate police state. Fiction, in essence, has become
fact albeit, a rather frightening one.
September
5, 2012
Constitutional
attorney and author John W. Whitehead [send
him mail] is founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute. He is the author of The
Change Manifesto (Sourcebooks).
Copyright
© 2012 The Rutherford Institute
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