2/20/2023

WI-FI -STUDENTS - WI-LD : TECHY MASTER ESSAY

 


Surveillance Technology : I spy, with my little W-Fi. Big Brother is watching you - even more than before.

LIKE ALL radio waves, Wi-Fi signals undergo subtle shifts when they encounter objects - human being included. These can reveal information about the shape and motion of what has been encountered, in a manner akin to the way a bat's chirps reveal obstacles and prey.

Starting from this premise Jiaqi Geng, Dong Huang and Fernando De la Torre, of Carnegie Mellon University, in Pittsburgh, wondered if they could use W-Fi to record the behavior of people inside otherwise unobservable rooms. As they describe in a posting on arXiv, they have found that they can.

''DensePose from Wi-Fi'', the paper in question, describes how they ran Wi-Fi signals from a room with appropriate routers in it through an artificial-intelligence algorithm trained ion signals from people engaging in various, known activities.

THIS ALGORITHM was able to reconstruct moving digital portraits, called pose estimations of the individuals in the room.

Mr Geng, Dr Huang and Dr De Ia Torre are not the first to think of doing this. But they seem to have made a significant advance. Earlier experiments had managed to obtain two-dimensional [2D] pose estimations based on as many as 17 ''vector points'' on the body - such as head, chest, knees, elbows and hands.

The new paper, by contrast, describes ''2.5D'' portraits that track 24 vector points. And, according to Dr Huang, the team has now built an enhanced version capable of generating complete 3D body reconstructions that track thousands of vector points.

Moreover, this work employed standard antennas of the sort used in household Wi-Fi routers. Previous efforts have relied on souped-up versions of the equipment.

Detailed Wi-Fi-based body tracking with a standard-issue router would have many uses. Mr. Geng, Dr Huang and Dr De Ia Torre talk of employing it to ''monitor the well-being of elder people''.

A team working on similar technology, led by Yili Ren of Florida State University, suggests it could be used in interactive gaming and exercise monitoring.

And, in 2016, Dina Katabi, Mingmin Zhao and Fadel Adib of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology demonstrated how Wi-Fi like radio signals could detect a volunteer's heartbeat [and thus his or her emotional state] remotely.

These ideas are, however, distractions from what any such system would certainly be used for a start with, namely surveillance and espionage.

In 2018, for example, Yanzi Zhu of the University of California, Santa Barbara and his colleagues showed how hackers posted outside someone's home could track the movements [though not then visualize the postures] of people inside, by intercepting escaping Wi-Fi signals.

It is easy to imagine who might be interested in the ability to turn any building's Wi-Fi network into  a mini panopticon.

Dr Huang declined to say who is sponsoring his team's work. However, another of their projects   -developing techniques for detecting specific human behaviours in video-surveillance footage - is paid for by IARPA, the research hub of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which oversees America's spies.

The World Students Society thanks The Economist.

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