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Azozel t1_ja86rrg wrote

It might make your face hard to see but if you're the only one wearing this then you're now super easy to track. Which means I can track you back to your vehicle or where you turned the lights on and see your face or where you came from or where you went.

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zero0n3 t1_ja8pm71 wrote

Yep. And that’s a job for AI in big systems (say at a Walmart or federal building)

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[deleted] t1_jaauq4z wrote

Do you think ai could be used in a ctos, watch dogs, kind of fashion?

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zero0n3 t1_jab9kzs wrote

Already is.

Airport and casinos can map out your entire path thru their property. They likely can isolate it too and “blur out” everyone else for evidence purpose.

If you want to know what a true dystopian system could look like? Look no further than casinos and China. I’d actually guess that US casinos are more advanced than China in some regards, but that’s because casinos are as close to the cutting edge US spy tech you’ll ever see without working for those agencies.

Just remember - sometimes these apps hate upgrading their UI. So it may look like a 1990s cctv system, but behind it is a cluster of 4090s or aws nodes doing the heavy lifting.

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Ronny_Jotten t1_ja92wym wrote

This is supposed to be an art project. The guy seems to be getting a lot of press for it right now. But it's a really old idea. I remember seeing another artist/hacker do the same thing many years ago, can't remember the name. It goes back at least 15 years. There are lots of other versions of it around too, youtube diy videos, even companies selling baseball hats with LEDs for the purpose.

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RabbitSlayre t1_jaa723m wrote

Yeah this has been around forever, so confused to see this presented as if it's new

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Ronny_Jotten t1_jac9lat wrote

I guess all it takes is an art student who's leaning into the self-promotion, and some "news" sites like Vice, PopSci, etc., that really want you to click on their links.

I mean, he has some other work that's not bad, and it got me to look at his website, so mission accomplished I guess. But it did leave me with the feeling that it's a bit narcissistic to hype something that's such a well-known, decades-old shtick, without acknowledging that. Maybe it's a useful quality in an artist... but it's not a necessary one.

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BOONKIEBOY t1_ja9mi17 wrote

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Ronny_Jotten t1_ja9s2s0 wrote

No, it wasn't that. And I don't think it was Adam Harvey. I'm thinking it was around 2006 or so, but I could be off by a bit. It was really the same, an art project with bright infrared LEDs that washed out the face on nighttime surveillance cameras. But he may not have invented it. The guy who did the hoodie says in another post that he read about the idea in a William Gibson novel.

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Papadapalopolous t1_jaaguj5 wrote

Cory Doctorow wrote about it in one of his books in the late ‘00s I think

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VikingBorealis t1_ja9v52r wrote

It's ripped straight from csi and/or criminal minds or something as well. And not a late episode either...

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b1sh4m0n t1_ja9lfra wrote

does vice think it's clever to refer to IR led as 'Surveillance Camera Parts'...

🤦🏾‍♂️

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the_red_scimitar t1_ja8799y wrote

This used to work incredibly well with smartphone cameras, but I believe they've corrected algorithms some years before, and it doesn't wipe it out completely like it used to. Not sure about infrared specific cameras though.

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RevBem21 t1_jaa41ec wrote

That episode of White Collar was a good one back in like 2004.

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MoreThanWYSIWYG t1_jaaboyn wrote

Seems like it would be ridiculously cheaper to just buy 1000 ir leds for $10

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mtsai t1_jaawhvt wrote

or just wear a full face mask cause human can still surveil you with their eyeballs.

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sobanz t1_jabt1p2 wrote

baby driver had it too

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m0le t1_ja8vivj wrote

So, you appear as a great big attention grabbing blob moving through the CCTV system. How useful.

If I was going to do anything dodgy I'd get someone else to walk near me in this thing confident that all security eyes are on him.

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slashd t1_ja87waq wrote

As security I would just rewatch videos of the previous week/month to find you without the LED strobe turned on. Those security systems have 2/4/8x speeds so it would be really fast to check.

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[deleted] t1_ja8q5id wrote

This is a serious question, you would watch weeks/months of video looking for one person? How would you be able to identify the person wearing this hoodie from another time they were not wearing it?

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bobartig t1_ja8ure3 wrote

You ask your tech to "enhance the pixels" and use an algorithm to fill in the missing data. Wait, show me what's behind the car in this photo, then zoom up on the reflection off the of the store window. There he is! Get a close up of the wrist - that tattoo is only worn by shot callers in the Sinaloa cartel. This has Hector Garza written all over it! Testicular, get me Boarder Patrol on the phone, we're going to need a joint task force!

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Jessica65Perth t1_ja85jkp wrote

So a criminals tool great

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andrewkam t1_ja88b2d wrote

No criminal would use this because it calls attention to you.

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Jessica65Perth t1_ja8ai5k wrote

Disagree, I worked in Security, when doing break ins it will be loved by crims as they will know it further helps hide their face. Hoodies draw attention and concern when worn and it does not fit the weather but crims do it to hide hair colour etc.. they wear sunglasses when not needed unless to hide facial features. If I was going to break into a factory, this would be what I wore now

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