Biometric Anti-Surveillance Kit

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BIOMETRIC DATA Shir David & Becca Ricks

Transcript of Biometric Anti-Surveillance Kit

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BIOMETRIC DATAShir David & Becca Ricks

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WHAT ARE BIOMETRIC IDENTIFIERS?

- Measurable, distinct characteristics that are used to verify the identity of individuals, including groups that are under surveillance.

- Fingerprints, DNA, face recognition, retina scans, palm veins, hand geometry, iris recognition, voice, and gait.

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PROBLEM AREA

- Biometric data is extremely sensitive. If your data is compromised, it’s not replaceable (unlike password tokens).

- Most often collected about populations that are already vulnerable, including criminals, travelers, and immigrants.

- How is that data being used? Who has access?

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AUDIENCE

- Potentially everyone, but especially groups that are under surveillance or are deemed socially vulnerable.

- Individuals who haven’t yet had biometric data collected about them by a government.

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The idea: Biometric resistance kit

- A toolkit of wearable objects aimed at masking and altering user’s personal biometric identity.

Receive the kitPut on the different objects

Resist biometric tracking

Wear them in public space

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USER PERSONAS

Persona #1: Activist

- Works as a community organizer and activist in New York City.

- Organizes and attends rallies, protests, and other events that might be under surveillance.

- Doesn’t want the government to track which events she is attending

- Doesn’t want images of her face linked to her activities

- Doesn't use the thumbprint feature on her iPhone

- Unsure of what biometric information has been collected about her

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USER PERSONAS

Persona #2: World traveler

- Writer & academic finishing her PhD. - French by nationality, but she has lived in

several countries, including the Netherlands, Germany, and Greece.

- Border crossings can be a headache, but she’s uncomfortable with sharing her fingerprint data in order to speed through the line.

- She’s thinking about emigrating to the U.S. to teach but isn’t sure she wants to give up her biometric data in exchange for a work visa.

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USER PERSONAS

Persona #3: Tech early adopter

- Works for a SF-based tech company as a UX/UI designer

- Always purchases the newest technologies and is often first in line at the Apple store when the new iPhone is released

- Loves the new fingerprint feature on iPhones and Windows laptops

- Enjoys the convenience and ease of new technologies that make signing/identity verification really quick.

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USER PERSONAS

Persona #4: Petty criminal

- Was arrested for jumping the MTA subway turnstile and had to spend the night in jail.

- She had never been arrested before and rarely engages in extra-legal activities

- Various data was collected about her, including 10 fingerprints and various photographs.

- After her release, she’s unsure what information the NYPD has about her and how will be tracking her behavior in the future.

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THE KIT

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THE KIT: FACIAL RECOGNITION

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THE KIT: GAIT

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THE KIT: FINGERPRINTS

- How it works: Fingerprint scans take a snapshot of the unique pattern of each individual’s finger.

- Possible interventions:

(1) Fevicol mold + glue — Trick Apple scanner by making a mold of someone’s fingerprint that anyone could slip on and wear.

(2) Silicon + fibers — Trick Apple scanner by wearing a silicon strip with fibers embedded in the silicon.

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THE KIT: PALM SCANS

- How it works: Palm scanners use infrared light to scan the unique vein pattern in an individual’s palm

- Possible intervention: Create adhesive heating pads (like the ones you wear when you’re skiing) that could be stuck onto an individual’s palm in order to block the scan.

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THE KIT: HAND GEOMETRY

- How it works: Hand geometry scanners take a snapshot of your hand and calculate the various distances between fingers, palm, etc. Typically used for verification, not identification.

- Possible intervention: Wear a flesh-colored glove that alters the length/location of fingers.

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THE KIT: IRIS SCAN

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Identity, Mian-Wei

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Biononymous Guide, Heather Hagborg & Jarad Solomon

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Stealth Wear, Adam Harvey

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FIELD RESEARCH & INTERVIEWS

We’ve talked to the following people about our project:

- Adam Harvey, Artist & Designer, ITP graduate (TBD) - Nasir Memon, Professor, NYU Tandon School of Engineering - Kevin Gallagher, Thanos Papadop, Philip Bontrager, Students, NYU

Tandon School of Engineering - Eric Rosenthal, Professor, NYU ITP - CTO of NYU Lagone Hospital (TBD)