Categories: Technology

Spy agencies want to accurately ID people from drones and rooftops

Taking biometric recognition to a higher level

Combining facial and body recognition from above, spy agencies are researching how to identify people at long range from drones and rooftops.

“Biometric recognition and identification at altitude and range may support protection of critical infrastructure and transportation facilities, military force protection, and border security” – IARPA

The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) is holding solicitations for its Biometric Recognition and Identification at Altitude and Range (BRIAR) program through October 21.

You may be aware of some of the technologies going into this program, such as facial recognition; however, BRIAR is taking it a step further by looking into “whole-body identification, gait recognition, and/or anthropomorphic classification (e.g., height, gender).”

According to IARPA, “The fusion of multiple biometric signatures to address these limitations remains underserved by the research community.”

Not only will the BRIAR program look to identify and recognize people at long range and high altitudes, it will do so by exploring “severe pitch angles (>20 degrees)” so that the cameras can ID people from a wide variety of angles.

Also included in the scope of BRIAR is how can people be identified by how they walk, also known as gait recognition, which China is testing out for law enforcement purposes.

Startups have already been tackling gait recognition for some time.

Wobot Intelligence, for example, helps businesses make sense of CCTV data by implementing a layer of Artificial Intelligence which makes the system capable of doing surveillance on behalf of the human eye.

Read More: ‘Privacy is myth’: AI for surveillance startup Wobot CPO

The Indian startup uses AI in surveillance footage for:

  • Activity Recognition, which is used to deduce human actions in present state, based upon complete action executions, and action prediction to predict human actions in future state based upon incomplete action executions.
  • Facial Recognition, which is a category of biometric software that maps an individual’s facial features mathematically and stores the data as a faceprint. The software uses deep learning algorithms to compare a live capture or digital image to the stored faceprint in order to verify an individual’s identity.
  • Object Detection, which is used to notice or discover the presence of real-world objects within an image or video frame and to be able to tell an object apart from the static background.
  • Posture Detection, which is done by determining three dimensional orientations by tracking the movement and orientation of a body with respect to a custom axes. Its use cases include real-time posture detection (talking on the phone, aggressive behavior, etc.), kinect and 3D camera based body posture detection.

The latest move by the intelligence community seems like the next logical step following other research programs into computer vision that would appear to complement the mission scope of BRIAR.

IARPA’s Janus program was launched “to dramatically improve the current performance of face recognition tools by fusing the rich spatial, temporal, and contextual information available from the multiple views captured by today’s ‘media in the wild.'”

And IARPA’s Activities in Extended Video (ActEV) Prize Challenge was set “to create algorithms that detect and localize activities in video.”

Read More: Every move you make IARPA will be watching you

These programs combine technologies such as:

  • Facial recognition
  • Body recognition
  • Computer vision
  • Drones
  • Robotics
  • Activity Detection
  • Gait recognition
  • And a host of other biometric technologies

When you combine all the technologies together, you get a sophisticated, state-of-the-art, cutting-edge, and whatever other clichéd buzzwords you can think of to describe a massive undertaking in surveillance.

“Further research in the area of biometric recognition and identification at altitude and range may support protection of critical infrastructure and transportation facilities, military force protection, and border security,” according to IARPA.

Once this goes through law enforcement, intelligence and military use, where will it go next?

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

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