Wednesday, December 01, 2004
Inventor Lets Everyone Be an Armchair Spy
Inventor Lets Everyone Be an Armchair Spy
TORONTO (Reuters) - New Internet-based technology could
soon turn regular computer users into armchair spies, a
Canadian inventor said on Monday.
Vincent Tao, an engineer at Toronto's York University said
he has invented a mapping and surveillance tool called SAME
(see anywhere, map anywhere), that produces images so sharp
that geographic co-ordinates typed into a Web site can reveal
the make of a car parked on the street.
Tao said SAME works by taking satellite images of the Earth
and combining them with real-time remote sensors that monitor
traffic and weather.
The information is reformatted on a searchable Web site
that can capture ground-level images of the Earth with little
or no time delay.
The resolution is 60 cm (2 feet) -- fine enough to
determine the make of a car, though not the details of a human
face, according to Tao.
"This is real-time streaming technology. It's like (the
online directory) MapQuest or the navigation system in your
car, but three-dimensional," he said in an interview on Monday.
"You'll see a globe, like a virtual Earth, and then you can
fly in from outer space and zoom all the way in to a city and
even to street level, which will be updated by very nice,
high-resolution imagery."
Tao said the potential applications are broad, including
defense, emergency response and environmental monitoring. He
added that the technology could become widely available as
early as next year.
"Our business model is looking at how to make this publicly
available."
But the technology also poses concerns, said Veera Rastogi,
a lawyer specializing in privacy issues with the Canadian law
firm Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP.
"Any surveillance-based technology like this gives rise to
the potential for abuse," she said.
"Right now it's a tool used by the Red Cross and defense,
but, down the road, in whose hands would this technology fall
and for what purpose? Bottom line is, it's a case where, these
days, the technology seems to be outrunning the law," Rastogi
said.
Cindy Cowan, the director of a Toronto shelter for battered
women, echoed Rastogi's concerns, saying the technology could
put women at greater risk of abuse.
"Already the Internet has become a place where women are
stalked, so to give another tool to abusive men motivated to
find and track and stalk -- it frightens me," she said.
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