Iris Scanning Set To Secure City In Mexico
kkleiner writes "The million-plus citizens of Leon, Mexico are set to become the first example of a city secured through the power of biometric identification. Iris and face scanning technologies from Global Rainmakers, Inc. will allow people to use their eyes to prove their identify, withdraw money from an ATM, get help at a hospital, and even ride the bus. Whether you're jealous or intimidated by Leon's adoption of widespread eye identification you should pay attention to the project – similar biometric checkpoints are coming to locations near you. Some are already in place."
I don't understand why I should be wary of this technology in and of itself. It's no different than a fingerprint scanner or a handful of other biometric scanners -- and most of them have the option to enter a password or swipe a card in lieu of scanning your eyes -- they have to. Not everyone has eyes. Or hands.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
I assume these will work whether you are conscious or not.
husbands, wives and other people who trust each other will no longer be able to lend their partner an ATM card and ask them to go take out some cash. Well done banks, for making technology slightly less useful while still allowing a crook to put a gun to your head and force you to make that withdrawal.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
I've beenusing the IRIS border control program in the UK for the last couple of years and I can't begin up tell you how good it is not to need to stand in lines for long or have to wait at an immigration desk for more than 30 seconds. Granted that the program is only open to frequent travelers to the UK, but it is a great example of how such systems can speed up slow tasks and make it somewhat more secure.
Of all the countries where I wouldn't want having my eye in my head as the only barrier to someone else's quick cash...
Nice off-topic soapbox, bro.
What good will this do. There are already so many beheadings in Mexico, the thugs will simply hold the severed heads up to the eye scanner and proceed to steal money from the ATM. Or, thinking more of convenience, they will just carve out the eyes, leaving the heads, and take the eyes to the ATM. Easier than carrying the whole head.
You think I'm joking or being sarcastic and cynical? Count to 10 and check CNN.
Not everyone has eyes. Or hands.
Or a pulse.
and heads. "Hey no one said they had to be attached to the body to work!"
I can't wait for the day I walk down the street and have billboards call out my name or stores asking me how I enjoyed those pants I last bought. Seems like I've seen that kind of marketing before.
Remember what happened to Warden William Smithers in that movie?
That's how this is going to end up...
Thank you. And BE well.
I have to return some videotapes...
The phrase "inherently fallible" is part of the headline of this recent Eureka Alert regarding Biometrics. Original work by the National Research Council.
There's only one reason to do this in Mexico first, it can be gotten away with. The people will do whatever you tell them. They're used to doing as the men with guns say, because if they don't, the men with guns have a way of getting nasty, since there's no repercussions.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
This is yet another example of a multinational corporation taking advantage of corrupt governments in Mexico and Latin America to push undesirable and invasive technologies and business practices upon ignorant and disadvantaged populations. Of course, even the ignorant can become informed and once the people of Leon see the sorts of uses to which corrupt government officials will put this new technology the backlash will begin: el pueblo unido jamás será vencido.
and little bits of wire -- rabbits
"eye identification"
"eyedentification"
Let me explain with facts why using biometrics for identification is a bad idea. In Brazil some bureucrat decided that to renew your drive license you need to attend a few (a lot) hours of classes about safe driving and first aides. To make sure that everybody would attend these stupid classes, they required fingerprint identification. What happened? Look at the foto in the following news (from a major Brazilian newspaper... the news are in portuguese, but the photo speaks everything):
http://oglobo.globo.com/pais/noblat/posts/2010/09/26/autoescola-em-sp-fraudava-exames-da-cnh-327621.asp
conclusion: people will always find a way to fraud biometrics. The question is: if someone gets your password, you can change it. If someone has your fingerprints, how do you change them?
It'll be a dismal failure and give biometrics a black eye.
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
You don't usually have to give a fingerprint at every major intersection or before entering a store.
Ha! captcha = "Proofs" as in proof you were near the crime scene.
So the Federal Goverment of Mexico has instituted a plan and technology to blind its citizens.
Just as the U.S.A. Department of Homaland Security has contracted out for a 7 km buffer zone with Mexico to he mined with cluster munitions with automated sensors.
Amongst the winners was Boing.
Even MacDonalds won a contract to erect restruants close, but out-side of the cluster land mine zone. The U.S.A. Department of Homeland Security is concerned about the contractual-workers lunch habits during the installation of the cluster land mines within the Demilertize Zone with Mexico.
Oh ... its Demilertized becaue the Uinted States of American will kill anything walking there. Har di har har! This is Obama Country! ... Cunt ... back in Country. Beutiful Billie Ray will be Pissed at this.
And President Obama put the
Lordy o' Lordy. Seem the State of Isreal just cant get enough meat for Kosher Sausage these days. :D
This is on the start of George Bush Snr's new world order, if people are fearful they will give up nearly all their rights and privacy just too feel safe.
Secured? Hardly. Monitored might be a good description, but "secured" can't be done with a camera no matter how smart the software is. Security is a human thing and accurate, reliable monitoring is just one piece of an overall security process.
How will the iris scanners see your eyes and vice versa?
Does anyone else find the company name "Global Rainmakers" rather (ironically) fitting? It is as if even the heaven itself is crying. Big brother will definitely come, it is only a matter of time now.
Now things gets really interesting.
I'm guessing t he next fashion statement for the globalized better-offs and proffessionals wil be... let's see :) er, armored ray-bans, perhaps ?
Ah! The fruits of neo-hoarding. Different haves for different folks. The hoarders ruin, loot, pillage, sack, hoard. Have loot. The hundred millions looted, pillaged, sacked, ruined, don't have anything left - but have a huge score to settle.
Guess I'll open up an "eye" shop. As a tribute to Blade Runner. While the market's still growing.
People report being unable to bank and enter their homes.
Soooo.... Do they run windows? This is the greatest database to download. Imagine how much you can get for a pair of contact lenses that mimic Carlos Slim's retina's.
Then again, how are you going to do a scan when there's spots of blood floating around at random? Like looking through a fence at close range, the person won't notice as much as the scanner will - which is why patients tend to ignore it as much as possible - the thought of someone sucking all the juice out of your eyeball and replacing it, or sticking needles in it to inject stuff, is scary. Very scary.
That's be so hilarious. Only thing is, by then it's too late and these scammers have had their money already.
this discriminates against me because I have no eyes
Security will come next by giving or denying people access to perimeters depending on who the eye belongs to.
You want to aim a camera at me and use facial recognition or even trace the capillaries in my skin? Fine - I'm all for it. Want to shoot a laser in my eye? Not a chance! I'm adding a set of mirrored contact lenses to my tinfoil hat collection.
On the one hand you take life too seriously, and on the other, you do not take playful existence seriously enough. Seth
gringo, this is how it spreads.
I just turn around, pull down my pants, and tell them they can scan my iris.
-
- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
In a country where drug lords rule, you want to spend how much money on this technology? How about using that cash to support basic infrastructure like roads and potable water?
Opting out actually puts more of a flag on you than just being part of the system. We believe everyone will opt-in.
Does anyone else think now might be a good time to get a good, reflective pair sunglasses to try an avoid getting flagged?
If someone manages to make a copy of your iris to create contact lenses that let them pose as you, we'll just issue you a new iris.
There was already an article about this.
Bend over and prepare for retina scan....
is now on just as close to being a reality as the awesome UI.
Yeah, that's what quality people the anti-immigration types are. They're all for forced labor (slavery, whether it's with or without compensation, and note that he wants to take away all possessions afterwards, so it's without compensation), and bringing back facial branding as a punishment.
I saw this article about a month ago. Have a friend who's physically in the area, and they said they checked around, and couldn't find anyone who'd heard word one of this.
Now, it may not be fake. But...
sunglasses!
So serious question: what about people without eyes? Or people with only one eye? Or old people with cataracts? What happens if you get punched or get pink eye?
What do you mean, "compromised"?
Passwords have to be secret because that's the only way to attach a password to a particular person. Irises don't have to be secret because they're literally attached to a person.
What you need to do to ensure the security of a biometric authentication system isn't to keep the biometric secret, it's to protect the integrity of the checkpoint against people holding up pictures or fingerprint molds made of Gummi worms. If you design a system that will fail if a readily observable body part gets copied, you have made an irretrievable design mistake.
I know of a security firm with a gov contract using cameras covering an entire international airport in the US, with software being used to evaluate potential "risks" in realtime. It's not perfect, but based on research showing how quickly the human brain loses it's attentiveness staring at security cameras, my money is on the algorithm.
I would gladly give my iris scan up too, if it meant I only had to stand in line at immigration for 30 seconds.
It's not the lack of iris scanners which forces you to wait longer than 30 seconds.
It's a bureaucracy made up of petty control freaks, paranoid "terrorist" fighters, and snake-oil profiteers. You wait in line for their benefit, not for a legitimate security reason.
Would you feel secure if everybody could see and photograph your password? Then it's just a question how easy it is to make a replica that will fool the system.
Besides, I have heard from a major expert on the topic that there are many iris/retina conditions that make the system fail, meaning the system is unable to extract required features or unable to uniquely identify individual. In fact, there's no single biometric method that will work for all the people and uniquely identify them. You have to combine several features to get anywhere close to 100%.
Iris Scanning Technology Firm Set To Secure Boatloads of Cash In Mexico
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 is the magic number.
BEEP BEEP Access Denied!
And as you might surmise, a fingerprint scanner is also wholly inappopriate to use for this purpose.
Compare it with house keys. They "identify" you to your house as an authorised entrant, assuming the keys aren't stolen (identity theft) or copied (impersonation). They don't tie this to some inherent property you were born with, but with a simple convenient device you can carry. Should someone else have their authorisation copied or stolen, you can just replace the lock and the keys. Inconvenient when there are a lot of key holders, but doable. And once it's done, it's over. New lock, new keys, everybody happy. Except, presumably, the thief.
Now, you usually carry your keys in a pocket or handbag. You always carry your fingerprints literally on the tips of your fingers, and unless you always wear gloves, you'll leave them everywhere. They're easy to swipe from a used glass, for example. The people over at the CCC did exactly that with the fingerprints of a particularly obnoxious german minister and published them, to make exactly this point. The US (for "homeland security") is working on devices to read fingerprints from twenty metres distance, they said so themselves. So it's not too much to assume that in the very near future the same can be done with irises. Or bone structure. Or whatever other "biometric" trick you're going to come up with.
Even DNA is still mostly guesswork; it's just assumed to work but I haven't seen a single exhaustive study establishing just how unique the DNA samples taken and analysed are. Recall that "science" usually only needs to look at similarities and differences between groups, whereas this work requires to establish high confidence we're dealing with exacly one unique individual. And some of us already walk around with three distinct sets of DNA (think transplants and blood transfusions and so on).
Even if no new detection tricks surface next year, within five years is still "very near future". You don't change over your infrastructure every ten or even twenty years. It's expensive and cumbersome and everybody hates it. It is more like the next great changeover might happen in fifty years or so, if the need is really pressing.
But the biggest problem is that none of these biometrics are replaceable when theft or impersonation happens. Note that there is no if to that, not if you think in rollouts this big. Some people will have their identities stolen, some will be killed for it, this being a country in the grip of a very bloody gang war. Those still alive and with eyes and fingers intact are still up shit creek because they can't replace their identities. Because their identities are now tied to something that turns out to be relatively far too easily copied but very hard and expensive to replace.
For this "casual authorisation" use, that is therefore exactly the wrong thing to do. Thus: Doing this is wholly inappropriate, and shows that all the people pushing biometrics for "identification" are not acting in our best interests, whatever they claim. We can sit back with popcorn and watch the fall-out, until it comes home to roost. And then we're all up shit creek.
If we are going to prohibit certain activities because of the extreme reactions it can cause in some people, we should outlaw religion
You forgot the punctuation!
Iris Scanning Set to "Secure" City in Mexico
There, fixed that for ya.
Big apple, new Yorik, undig it, something's unrotting in Edenmark.
on the first dateline Leon news story about an eyeball on a stick?
Iris and face scanning technologies from Global Rainmakers, Inc. will allow people to use their eyes to ... get help at a hospital ...
Whatever happened to helping the sick and needy?
Seriously, every single person I have ever seen that was addicted to hard drugs, started out with Caffeine. No exceptions. It must be the most powerful gateway drug out there, second only to water.
A robber can't force you to type in your pin number, no matter what you have the option of refusing to cooperate. It's very easy for them to remove your eye, remove your eyelid, or the entire head and press your face to a camera. Why hassle with convincing someone to cooperate with you when you can just kill them and be on your way with what you need to take all their money. I see this promoting nothing but increased physical violence and death in a place that's already out of control.
Oh, I wholeheartedly agree; vandalism is a choice. It just isn't the choice you think it is, but rather a choice to be provided with government provided "housing" where all of your choices will be made for you for quite some time.
Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
This is exactly where things are going.
Mexico is first because it has the highest tension between those who live like animals, and those who don't. This trend will continue, however.
This means only those in the government, or who have PAID their dues, can commit crimes.
It won't mean less crime, it will just mean less abuse of people will be CALLED crimes. But fighting back will of course, be illegal.
This should work out really well for the Economic Royalists.
>>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
Will the equipment handle my artificial eye too? If yes, then no security because artificial eyes can be copied easily.
Does it come with something to prevent the local drug lord from cutting your head off? Eye ball scanners PLAEZZE they will cut off your head and take it to the bank machine ... I'm not kidding! Who gives a shit about this crap?!? Secure your citizens right to a safe life in the real world first. They need more police and military. This is a big joke. I am not pro guns but if I was living in Mexico my whole family would be double strapped with Kevlar shit all over. Hell even my Santa suit would be made out of Kevlar with plates. My treat bag would defiantly have at least one automatic weapon and some grenades for sure. HOHOHO!