Think twice before buying your next smartphone.
A Motorola Solutions patent application published on July 4 lays out a method for tracking and identifying customers who frequently change their mobile devices. Why? Well, that would be because individuals who use more than an unspecified number of phones are "potential criminals" — at least according to Motorola.
The patent application, which was initially filed in 2016, is shocking in its level of presumption and, frankly, creepiness.
"During operation, a server continuously receives facial recognition data for individuals along with device IDs detected at the time the facial recognition data was obtained," reads the application. "Devices associated with the individual are determined. This process is repeated and a determination is made as to whether the devices associated with the individual have changed."
Just in case anyone was in any way confused, the application adds that "[an] individual that frequently changes devices will be identified as suspicious."
While it stands to reason that those up to no good might switch phones frequently in order to avoid being tracked, so might journalists, human rights workers, or members of various at-risk communities. Developing technology meant to track and identify those individuals raises numerous privacy questions this patent application makes no serious attempt at addressing.
We reached out to Motorola Solutions — a successor to Motorola, Inc. that provides "mission-critical communication products and services for enterprise and government customers" and differs from Motorola Mobility, which manufactures cellphones — in an attempt to determine its motivation for pursuing such a patent, but received no response as of press time.
To be clear, as explained in the patent application, this is not a small on-device setting that could be toggled off by privacy conscious individuals. Motorola Solutions is proposing a large-scale surveillance network that potentially tracks everyone in a city.
"[A] facial recognition system and device ID sniffer (sometimes referred to as a stingray) may be implemented, for example, at the entrances and exits to various locations," reads the application. "People and devices can be 'identified' when they enter and leave a location. This will allow multiple detections of each individual, aiding in determining those devices associated with the individuals."
SEE ALSO: How to remove your private info from the web in an afternoonIn other words, the patent application is suggesting a way to associate each and every person's face with a unique mobile device. In this scenario, it wouldn't matter if you bought your phone in cash and load minutes onto a SIM card with cash. Motorola Solutions would have your face pegged to the smartphone via facial recognition systems and other assorted tracking tech spread across the city.
Because, you know, "potential criminals" must be stopped at any cost.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Motorola patent application seeks to track people who switch phones-逆水行舟网
sitemap
文章
941
浏览
9
获赞
6742
I 'walked' Boston Dynamics' robot dog around San Francisco
"What's its name?" "Can I take a photo?""What is that?"The Boston Dynamics robot dog known as Spot sGoogle Meet to add emoji reacts so you can heart your friends and coworkers
Google Meet is about to get a little more lively. On Wednesday, the company said it's adding severalApple discontinues two more iMac desktop configurations
The Apple iMac Pro is no longer available and now it looks like the remaining iMac desktop options aGoogle Meet to add emoji reacts so you can heart your friends and coworkers
Google Meet is about to get a little more lively. On Wednesday, the company said it's adding severalThis lawyer helped legalize same
Every day of Pride Month, Mashable will be sharing illuminating conversations with members of the LG2022 Bolt EUV review: Slick with hands
Look, Ma: No hands, no feet, and no gas!As I drove the 2022 Bolt EUV, Chevrolet’s new all-eleciOS 14.5 beta lets you set Spotify, other music services as default
Attention, Siri users: You'll finally be able to ditch Apple Music and make Spotify, or another thir23andMe CEO lays off 100, attributes sales slump to privacy concerns
Looks like you aren't the only person who might have gotten freaked out by consumer DNA tests recentTrump's already figured out how to game Facebook's election ads ban
Donald Trump has never met a Facebook rule he couldn't bend, break, or ignore to his advantage. TheElon Musk is now the official 'Technoking' of Tesla, whatever that means
Elon Musk, Tesla CEO and Technoking. No, we're not kidding: those are now the two official positionsTrump's letter to Turkey's president is almost beyond parody, but not beyond memes
When Donald Trump "leaked" his Oct. 9 letter to Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on WedneChinese social media quote 'Les Mis' to protest coronavirus censorship
A song from the musical Les Misérablesis making the rounds on Chinese social media after thePlanned Parenthood's app is expanding access to birth control
The Trump administration is doing everything it can to undermine Planned Parenthood's law-abiding, sNetflix comically tries to crack down on account sharing
Netflix is on to your shenanigans, and by golly it's going to do something about it.The streaming beShakira's halftime Super Bowl tongue is now a wonderful meme
Shakira blessed us with the first meme of the Super Bowl LIV. Jennifer Lopez and Shakira's halftime