Big Brother Just Got Scarier

By: Rob Waugh
dailymail.co.uk

A new camera technology from Hitachi Hokusai Electric can scan days of camera footage instantly, and find any face which has EVER walked past it.

Its makers boast that it can scan 36 million faces per second.

The technology raises the spectre of governments - or other organizations - being able to ‘find’ anyone instantly simply using a passport photo or a Facebook profile.

The ‘trick’ is that the camera ‘processes’ faces as it records, so that all faces which pass in front of it are recorded and stored instantly.

Faces are stored as a searchable ‘biometric’ record, storing the unique

When the police - or anyone else - want to search for a particular individual, they’re searching through a gallery of pre-indexed faces, rather than a messy library of footage.

‘We think this system is suitable for customers that have a relatively large-scale surveillance system, such as railways, power companies, law enforcement, and large stores,’ says the company.

The company aims to make the system available within the next tax year, according to a report in DigInfo.

The system does have limitations - it can only scan faces within a certain field of view in front of the camera, and faces have to be at least 40×40 pixels in size to be indexed by the system.

1 Comment on Big Brother Just Got Scarier

  1. kevin brown // April 10, 2012 at 2:55 am //

    Very powerful… an absolute control grid dream… absolute power, I wonder how long before it get’s used for corrupt purposes… organizing the ‘silencing’ of opposition persons would never be easier in ‘control areas’!

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