The 'New World Order'
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The New World Order

Futuristic See-Thru Panoptic Surveillance System

A See-Thru 3D Video Surveillance System could be loosely described as a formalised, scalable implementation of Superman’s X-ray vision. The system enables one or more surveillance agents, using a single high resolution, auto-stereoscopic display, to remotely monitor the security situation of an arbitrarily large number of locations at-a-glance. Agents can see, hear and transport their focused viewpoint through walls, floors and ceilings, zooming into a specific location to monitor it at a level so acute that it seems beyond the levels of even science fiction. Designed to enable both wholistic site-wide and granular-level security, the system is ideal for monitoring airports, shipping ports, transit sites and other ports-of-entry, hotels, casinos, shopping malls, campuses, military bases, large buildings and building complexes, offering total situational awareness at a glance.

Though it seems almost preposterous, the remarkable capability of this system is the result of the combination and integration of multiple technologies and insights. Most of these individual component technologies have already been developed to varying degrees by some companies and some groups of developers have combined varying subsets of these technologies, but its unique and unprecedented in its integration/combination with its proprietary Intelligent HyperCompression (IHC) being the key to the system's success.

IHC is an “an object oriented wavelet-based compression system for security and surveillance applications” and a “programmable compression hardware and software solution.”. IHC enables object selection and extraction and features high-resolution viewing while conserving bandwidth, meaning high quality images can be selected and viewed with higher data rates and higher frame rates than the significantly reduced background.

This system is claimed to enable a single agent to monitor thousands of places at the same time without overwhelming them with the massive amount of information being processed and displayed. It enables this by using artificial intelligence to determine what’s important to look at. The agent's mental load is radically optimized towards monitoring only what is most critical to security: presence and movement of (groups of) people and vehicles inside a campus/site and its buildings as well as any security-sensitive events (such as fires, smoke, badge access, assemblies, gun-shots, people running etc).

These security-critical events and alerts are adapted into one system then correlated against each other based upon defined security policy and rules. This automated, root cause analysis enables disparate real-time security data to be combined into “an integrated panoptic security command centre (over)view.”

All information streams and elements which may detract from the overarching goal of transit-site security surveillance are dynamically subtracted from the agents view and not displayed unless triggered by the system as relevant or requested by the agent. In other words, agents only monitor what they need to relevant to surveillance and transit-site security.

Events which need analysis by the human operator are flagged by a “artificially intelligent suspicious activity detector.” This detection system uses pattern recognition and possibly also neural nets to detect potential security or safety indicative events such as: the assembly of groups larger than X people; loitering; running; stressed shouting; suspect clothing (balaclavas, squad-type clothing, bullet-proof vests) or suspect items hidden under clothing; nervousness of individuals and groups; fires; smoke and gasses; explosions etc.

The three dimensional See-Thru surveillance system is effectively a complex form of Augmented Reality which fuses real-world video imagery with volumetric models in a real-time 3D display to help observers comprehend multiple streams of temporal data and imagery.

The “See-Thru” imaging is enabled by the combination of imagery supplied by many low-cost 360º cameras and dynamic background subtraction, which makes the walls of buildings and vehicles transparent, offering at-a-glance situational awareness of security-relevant people, objects and vehicles in motion.

In essence, the system significantly empowers surveillance agents with something akin to an X-ray like "God's Eye View" super sight capability. The agents have compre­hen­sive overview. They can see, hear and transport their focused viewpoint through walls; floors and ceilings; can zoom into and monitor a specific location.

Key elements/components of this See-Thru surveillance system include: * Concept of real time (stereoscopic) display of video-sprites of people and vehicles inside and among user navigable "transparent" 3D wire frames of building(s); building complexes or battlefield areas. * Usage of panoramic video imaging systems (instead of classic cameras) * Rapid production of 3D model of site/campus through reverse "volumetric painting" using DV camcorder-based capture system * Real-time dynamic fusion of panoramic video streams into 3D model of site/campus/battlefield. * Real-time extraction of video imagery of moving and semi-static objects (people, vehicles, animals etc.) with live transposition into 3D scenes. * Live video-based 3D tracking of moving objects within designated security-sensitive areas. * Autostereoscopic display for added accuracy of depth perception by surveillance agent. * Intuitive 3D user-interface for empowered analysis and management of security threats or breaches, or battlefield situations (including 3C activities) * Optimized detection & remediation of surveillance coverage blind spots * Real-time dynamic fusion of video data from mobile cameras (on vehicles (e.g. security patrols or battlefield reconnaissance vehicles); helmet mounted; on micro-UAVs or small helium blimps;) * Integrated display of results from triangulation based gunshot locator into the 3D model. * Alternative panoptic modes for single screen video only panoptic surveillance leveraging latent capacity of human brain for massively parallel processing of defocused viewing combined with peripheral field-of-view imagery. * Integrated on going or on demand identification through facial recognition against customer definable database of security sensitive persons. * Integration and correlation of multiple events from physical security monitoring systems.


Surveillance Society – Panopticon In The Age Of Digital Media

Part 1

“The social technologies we see in use today are fundamentally panoptical – the architecture of participation is inherently an architecture of surveillance.” – Joshua-Michéle Ross

The concept of the “Panopticon” as derived by Jeremy Bentham is one of the most significant reference points to surveillance ethics in the modern age. The panopticon refers to a prison, shaped like a circular grid with the cells adjacent to the outside walls. At the center of the circular building stands a tower where the prison supervisor would live and monitor the inmates.

Large external windows and smaller internal windows in each cell would allow the supervisor to monitor the activities of the prisoners. The premise was that the prisoners would not know when they were under surveillance, Bentham argued, which in turn would lead the prisoners to believe that they were constantly under watch and would encourage them to be self-disciplined. This type of environment would promote discipline and would deter the prisoners from misbehaving or committing crimes in the future.

Michel Foucault in his book Discipline and Punish (1975) breathed new life into the concept of panopticon. Foucault argued that the panopticon was being used as a disciplinary mechanism in societies in order to subjugate its citizens. Foucault looked at the use of power and its increasing bureaucratization in the modern world. He studied torture and the emphasis on the sovereignty and power of the king.

In the period of Enlightenment, the prison system was introduced and was accepted as an efficient means of punishment and a disciplinary mechanism that went beyond military or religious arenas. Owing to the seemingly persistent gaze of the prison supervisor, the panopticon served as both a means of punishment and a form of discipline for the prisoners.

Today the panopticon is used to analyze surveillance in various different settings such as the workplace, government administration, and consumer contexts. The importance of panopticon as a metaphor begins to fade when we start thinking about whether modern forms of surveillance are analogous to the central tower concept. This begs me to ask the question- Does the fact that we do not know that we are being watched indicate that we are being normalized in the way the panopticon was intended to correct behavior?

In the panopticon the prisoners are constantly in fear of being watched which is indeed the point. However in the digital era, state surveillance on the internet is almost impossible to locate. It is invisible; there is no visual marker such as the central tower, no supervisor staring at you every time you log into a webpage.

Digital Panopticon

It was not until the Snowden leaks that individuals were made aware of the sheer scale of the surveillance by the NSA. One could argue that this essentially makes the system more panoptic as we are aware of it. The emphasis in this case is not concerning correcting behavior but on providing security from those who would threaten the sovereignty of the country. Modern day surveillance techniques supported by technological advances adds a degree of complexity and mobility with which society has not encountered before. Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras provide a ubiquitous presence, one that is hidden and often anonymous and to a large extent is likened to the panopticon on a major scale.

With Bentham’s conception of panopticon, and to some extent the presence of CCTV, there is a corporeal sense of exposure in the face of authority. A large chunk of our lives are spent online and we share so much data every single day, but we do not feel the same attachment to the data as we do for our bodies. Our data, however, is under surveillance, not just by the government but also by corporations looking to capitalizing on that information.

In the age of social media we are constantly under a vast grid of surveillance – of permanent visibility. Social networks have made it a routine to engage its users into self-reporting about what they are doing, reading, thinking in the form of status updates. The crowd reading the post are not only made aware of our personal thoughts, feelings and preferences, but are also acutely aware of our location. In a lot of cases we are opting into these automated reporting structures that detail our location at any given point in time. This is done in exchange for simple pleasures like finding a good local restaurant or a park without taking into account the trade-off. In other words we are in part responsible for contributing to the panopticon culture – by willingly sharing our data and our every movement, and status is made a matter of public record.

Modern day panopticon architecture is omnipresent and insidious. It no longer remains in the prison system but has permeated towards society as a whole. Panopticism in the digital era is more subtle in its nature, we are forced to conform to norms and behave accordingly while never actually being aware of the hold it has over us. The watchtower has been replaced by security cameras and algorithms, police presence and data trawlers. “The counterpart to the central observation tower,” Soshana Zuboff notes, “has become a video screen. The web of windows is replaced by procedures for data entry such as microprocessors built into operating equipment, or the control interfaces that record operator inputs, or daily system updates provided by crafts workers in their remote field sites” (323)

Though the physical panopticon model was never actually constructed, Foucault argues that since the Industrial Revolution there is a metaphoric panoptic model has been encapsulating society. The modern education system was developed to ensure that school children were well groomed for a life of working in factories, it aimed to give them just enough knowledge to join the workforce and become productive, docile bodies. With the spread of imperialism in the 19th century, populations were conditioned through disciplinary mechanisms to become more docile susceptible to hegemonic control.

The presence of guards ensured that the subjects were kept in line and were doing their jobs. Owing to the threat of punishment and an ever present system of visual surveillance people became more aware of their own behavior and took pains to ensure that they followed the rules. By engaging in surveillance of their own against themselves, they became instrumental in their own domination and subjugation. This concept of self-surveillance is a cornerstone of Foucaultian disciplinary power.

An important feature of the panoptic model is that it is founded on the premise of presenting fiction as indisputable fact. This can be seen through the omnipresent nature of the supervisor/observer. The belief is that as long as they remain invisible but still felt as a presence, they can be considered to be able to see everything at once, and the prisoners in the panopticon will not know otherwise. “The moment the inspector allows himself to be seen anywhere in the panopticon,” Miran Božovič writes, “he loses his omnipresence in the eyes of those who can see him: those who can see him, can, of course, tell whether his eyes are directed toward them; those who can see him thus can see they are not being seen” (9).

The Gaze

The notion of the gaze is a major feature of panopticon, both for those on the inside of the watchtower and those without. It is the element of not knowing where the guards are, who they are and what they are observing that is keeping the system afloat. If the prisoners can see into the watchtower and observe everything, then the entire system would collapse.

As it is fundamentally impossible to keep watch of every single prisoner at all times, the panoptic model creates the illusion that they are being watched. The fiction narrative of the watchful eye is carried further by convincing the prisoners that at every instant they could be under observation which further reinforces that fiction. The prisoners begin to internalize this fiction and modify behavior to avoid being punished by the inspector.

The modern panopticon does not rely on a central watchtower. The goal of the modern panopticon is to make those in the system forgot that they are under observation. Even though surveillance cameras hold a ubiquitous position in public spaces, these cameras themselves have been made to appear as subtle and hidden as possible, often blending into the surroundings. CCTV cameras especially have been designed in such a way that would make it easy for people not to notice them.

To some extent most people are aware they are being watched, however the unobtrusive nature of the cameras makes it is easy for people to forget their existence and drop the pretense of self-surveillance. Because of the fact that these surveillance cameras are not as easily visible to people, they no longer feel the panoptic gaze on them and are far less likely to behave in the same way as the subjects in a traditional panopticon model such as a prison.

Society today is steeped in systems of panoptic power, this has led to a condition of normalization of behavior for fear of retribution from the State. While it can be argued that the fear of the gaze can deter criminal behavior and promote a society that is, by and large, safer, this comes at the expense of personal freedom. With the introduction of CCTV and computerized data over the past several decades, it has made it relatively easier for people to access other peoples’ personal data.

The modern panoptic society raises important ethical questions concerning individuals’ privacy and security. In the American context, the modern panopticon could be in violation of the constitutional rights to freedom of expression. The modern panoptic society is a reality and we encompass it. There is no denying that our data is readily available for anyone who wants access to it and we are under constant observation both by way of a camera lens and by tracking data. One must wonder if the price of living in a secure and technologically advanced society is worth the price of personal freedom. However in a panopticon, you are told that you are free and that if one has nothing to hide, then there is nothing to fear.

Foucault also echoes Sartre in his discourse on gaze, as “to look”. According to David Shumway, “Sartre argued that to be caught by the look of another is to be objectified and rendered a thing rather than an object or person, and as a result to feel shamed, alienated, enslaved and even endangered by the other” (52). This essentially is the purpose of disciplinary power, by reducing the subject to a “body” rather than a person, it dehumanizes them making them more susceptible to institutional control. The Foucaultian nature of gaze “is a matter of applying a language or a mathematic to the thing seen so that it is constituted by the observer in his terms” (53). Foucault’s concept of the gaze was linked to a loss of freedom and autonomy by the individual. In Foucault’s system of disciplinary power, notes John Ransom, individuals are reduced to a political force and are intended to be exploited according to the best possible use of their skills. (46)

Normalization is used as a tool to making a more productive society. These procedures increase efficiency and can help generate more capital in a factory environment. According to Foucault, disciplinary power takes human impulses and makes use of it to create a more productive society. The main aim of disciplinary power is to compel other forces to accept the disciplinary framework as the norm, and the disciplinary norm as the absolute truth. By making us aware of the disciplinary apparatus, the subjected population engages in self-surveillance, which can lead to a betterment of oneself. Disciplinary power allows those in power to decide what is “normal” and then impose that idea on those beneath them in the hierarchy, and in time those subjected bodies see it as “normal” too,

Panoptic Technologies

In modernity, technological advancements have made it possible to observe large populations vastly exceeding anything Bentham could have predicted. The rise of the modern security state has led to governments and corporations being able to monitor the behaviors and trends of citizens and consumers to more easily control them and to enforce checks on transgressive behavior. People are constantly told not to fear surveillance in the modern panoptic system. Surveillance mechanism are carried out in the interest of public good.

The move towards more refined camera and facial recognition technology and biometrics has changed the surveillance landscape. Now with the overlapping of gazes, it far more easy for the Inspector to gather information about an individual provided he has access to the appropriate databases. It can be argued that the idea of privacy and personal information is steadily becoming a thing of the past. Much of these databases that record facial patterns overlap each other, this eventually leads to the gradual leakage of data from the public sector into the private, and vice versa.

Employers can carry out background checks of their employees and potential hires through these resources. These security systems were created with ostensibly altruistic intentions. Law enforcement and governments make use of these technologies to single out and locate escaped criminal, known terrorist or a missing person. But these resources also come with faults as they have the tendency to act less than altruistically when directed at refugees, political dissidents or striking trade unionists. What is concerning is that such technologies are moving into the hands of private corporate security, which stands outside the purview of regulation and democratic accountability that constrains state agencies.

Left on their own these new technologies can be considered a by-product of positive social benefit. The potential risks posed by contemporary surveillance are weighed and counterbalanced by the increased sense of security they provide. According to Foucault, freedom is an underlying condition for power, and in the absence of freedom the only method through which power can be exercised is domination (Crane, p. 304). The disciplinary system allows for subjects to be free, in so far as they are presented with choices for their behavior.

In the event that they have been conditioned well, they will engage in self-surveillance and behave in accordance with the norms of the social framework they are placed in. Foucault posits that self-governing and self-surveillance were tools used in repression and social control, but like any tool, they could be turned into more productive means. In a modern panoptic model, subjects are expected to keep a check on their own behavior to better fall in line with the social norms, however, this increase of self-awareness can inadvertently allow the subjects to become a more proactive force in their own conception of freedom.

Part 2

It is rather difficult and impossible to impose regulation on mass surveillance technologies as they evolve at a rapid rate, making any law or regulation redundant in a span of a couple of years. The mindset of thinking that everything will stay the same means that the general public is largely taken unaware when a new technology enters the game and is able to exploit them in ways previously not thought possible, and little can be done to prevent it because the abuses of power have never been conceived of. It can be stated that the current surveillance society in which we live is a reaction to the events of September 11, 2001.

When the threat of terrorism became a reality, the government quickly instituted policies to combat it, one such policy was through the Patriot Act. This act allowed for the use of roving wiretaps, searches of business records and the surveillance and collection of personal records on people suspected of being involved in terrorist activity. (Sheridan, 2016). The PATRIOT act was played on people’s fears following a post 9/11 world. Acts that could otherwise be considered unlawful and unconstitutional were justified in the name of national security.

Many of the expansions of power laid out by the Patriot Act already existed as proposed legislation that had been shot down in previous incarnations, either because it was seen as unconstitutional or giving too much power to certain branches of government. But in the uncertainty that characterized the period following the wake of the terrorist attacks, lawmakers who supported those measures saw an opportunity and took it, establishing the precedent for what effectively became a new political era.

Two sections in the Patriot Act highlight panopticism and mass surveillance by the government. This includes title V and Title IX. Title V’s was introduced in order to remove obstructions that would otherwise impede the investigation of terrorism. Agents could gain access to some of the most private information of American citizens such as phone records, email transcripts, financial records, consumer reports, hospital and educational records, etc. that too with very little justification and without a warrant and only requires “a simple certification by federal investigation officials to be provided with private information without a court order or a showing of probable cause”, thereby sidestepping judicial oversight entirely. (139)

Panopticism and the Public Eye

Mass surveillance technologies are spreading at a rapid rate and go unchecked primarily because the general population does not fully realize the real risks involved in a security panopticon. What is even more jarring is the fact that once a security and surveillance devices are installed, it is likely to remain in place and be updated with newer and more refined technologies.

Any group that comes to power in the foreseeable future will have access to all the security and surveillance apparatuses and will have a longstanding legal precedent to take advantage of all of those technologies. This transfer of technology even in the hands of a democratic government is a terrifying prospect as one can never know if and when governments will decide to exploit their power for political gains.

Political structures are always in a state of flux, with regimes rising and falling from power frequently. Any group that comes to power has access to large reservoirs of personal data. But it is rather difficult to comprehend this, and far more convenient to assume that “If I have nothing to hide, I have nothing to fear”, a mindset deliberately cultivated by the very real institutions that wish to gather this data in the first place. This lack of imagination on the part of the population on the dangers of mass surveillance and the modern panopticon could prove disastrous.

The Snowden Effect

On June 5, 2013, The Guardian released an exclusive news report revealing a secret court order that the United States government had issued forcing Verizon to give them the phone records of millions of Americans. In another exclusive report, it was revealed to the public the existence of the Prism program which gave NSA agents access to information on citizens held by Internet and data companies like Google, Apple and Facebook. These companies denied giving the United States government back door access to the information.

Edward Snowden- the whistleblower responsible for the leaks went public stating that he had no reason to hide because he had done nothing wrong. Snowden a former Central Intelligence Agency employee and former contractor of the United States government, through his actions of leaking surveillance information by the NSA managed to destabilized the modern panopticon that had long since evolved beyond the hard power of the watchtower that marked the pre digital age. Snowden’s acts changed the way the world viewed the panoptic framework as he brought it back into the limelight.

Snowden confirmed the dangers of surveillance and stated that there were provisions in place which allowed certain people access to any kind of personal information they wanted about anyone in the country. By blowing the whistle, Snowden helped returned the panoptic framework to that of self-surveillance and an awareness of the Inspector that had previously been lacking in the digital era. Despite Snowden’s actions, there has been very little change in the laws and policies that allowed the data collection in the first place, however, in a way the public is more aware of the surveillance than ever before.

Snowden’s goal was to change the intrusive and oppressive system that violated individual rights. Foucault, on the other hand was less interested in change and more in the factors that lead to change such as discourses that pave the way for change. For Foucault, institutions are intrinsic and decisive in the development of society, and the choices that shape the institutions shape us.

Conclusion

Technologies in the past several decades has made society more transparent and has also made it easier for governments and institutions to keep track of people. It cannot be denied that in the course of the past several decades, the political ethos and the nature of threats to Western nations have also changed. We live in a society where anyone can be a threat and there is a need for constant policing to ensure that those threats can be dealt with appropriately before any actual damage is caused. Surveillance systems have traditionally emerged and expanded alongside democratic government and the expansion of citizenship rights. The social contract applies to modern surveillance societies as much as it ever did, and even the rapidly advancing pace of technology is not enough to change that.

By analyzing the modern panopticon through a Foucaultian lens, it becomes evident that the system was introduced as a way to protect citizens from external threats. However, with the expansion of security apparatus these tools have the potential to turned against citizens and control them by promoting a culture of repression and fear. Under the modern panoptic form of power, citizens are made to believe that they are in constant danger and in order for the state to protect them the need to give up their liberty for safety.

Subjects living under the system are told to forget that they are under surveillance so that the watchers can continue to gather data. When it is revealed that the surveillance is extending its boundaries and impinging on human rights such as freedom of expression and privacy, subjects are encouraged to monitor their own behavior, much like they would in a panoptic prison. This allows the people in positions of power to control society without actually exerting any overt power over it, they are successful because they make use of the anxieties of the public to further their agenda.

While this maybe a good thing, society is quickly approaching a situation where we must decide if we are willing to trade our right to privacy for an increased sense of security. Big Brother is watching out for us, but that does not change the fact that Big Brother is still watching. This behavioral editing according to Foucault is the very core of disciplinary power and one of the most effective tools for controlling populations.