Monday, April 25, 2011

Traffic Analysis

You can learn a lot just by crunching numbers on patterns of travel and communications usage without ever hearing a single word:

Apple and Google may be intensifying privacy concerns by tracking where and when people use their mobile phones—but the true future of consumer surveillance is taking shape inside the cellphones at a weather-stained apartment complex in Cambridge, Mass.

For almost two years, Alex Pentland at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has tracked 60 families living in campus quarters via sensors and software on their smartphones—recording their movements, relationships, moods, health, calling habits and spending. In this wealth of intimate detail, he is finding patterns of human behavior that could reveal how millions of people interact at home, work and play.

Through these and other cellphone research projects, scientists are able to pinpoint "influencers," the people most likely to make others change their minds. The data can predict with uncanny accuracy where people are likely to be at any given time in the future.

So for all those enthralled by the idea of Twitter and Facebook revolutions, remember that the regime thugs can use your tools to predict what you will do and where you will do it.

And then let you rot in a very real dungeon until you really die.