Wouldn't it need to be non-commercially available music, so they couldn't just find the audio data of the track, invert its wave, and cancel it out of the recording?
CACOPHONY FOR THE REVOLUTION!
You could carry a boombox around playing loud music where ever you go. Perhaps this would be the end of earbuds. :-)On Tue, Mar 5, 2013 at 10:20 AM, Anthony Di Franco <di.franco@gmail.com> wrote:
People have rendered surveillance cameras useless with very bright IR LEDs in their fields of view.
Could something similar be done for sound recording devices?On Mar 5, 2013 6:17 AM, "Anon195714" <anon195714@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Yo's-
Something I forgot to add re. DARPA's desire for universal recording of
face-to-face conversations.
What's the ideal device for doing all that recording?
How'bout something you wear? How'bout something that "everyone" wears?,
or even a significant fraction of "everyone"?
Like maybe Google Glasses.
Always on, camera and mic always "connected" to "the cloud." Orwell's
telescreen gone mobile.
Everyone who wears them will become, in effect, _unpaid surveillance
drones_ watching their family and friends, not from up in the sky, but
from up close where every word can be heard.
Some will say "oh, there's no stopping technology." People said that
about the atomic bomb and the hydrogen bomb. But public outcry led
first to treaties and then to progressive degrees of nuclear
disarmament. We haven't used that technology since it was first used in
WW2.
We can stop pernicious tech if we choose. We can refuse, we can
withdraw consent, we do not have to press the Buy button.
Technology should liberate and empower people. "Conveniences with a few
strings attached" are not liberation, they're puppet-strings.
It's all about control: technology that you can control, vs. technology
that can control you.
-G.
=====
On 13-03-05-Tue 1:50 AM, Anon195714 wrote:
>
> Yo's-
>
> This just in:
>
> "DARPA wants to make [voice recognition/transcription] systems so
> accurate, you’ll be able to easily record, transcribe and recall all the
> conversations you ever have. ... Imagine living in a world where every
> errant utterance you make is preserved forever. ... DARPA [awarded
> U.Texas comp sci researcher Matt Lease]... $300,000... over two years to
> study the new project, called “Blending Crowdsourcing with Automation
> for Fast, Cheap, and Accurate Analysis of Spontaneous Speech.”"
>
> "The idea is that business meetings or even conversations with your
> friends and family could be stored in archives and easily searched. The
> stored recordings could be held in servers, owned either by individuals
> or their employers. ... The answer, Lease says, is in widespread use of
> recording technologies like smartphones, cameras and audio recorders...
> [A] memorandum from the Congressional Research Service described [an
> earlier DARPA project of this type known as] EARS, as focusing on speech
> picked up from broadcasts and telephone conversations, “as well as
> extract clues about the identity of speakers” for “the military,
> intelligence and law enforcement communities.”"
>
> http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2013/03/darpa-speech/ (Yes, "real geeks
> don't read Wired," but nonetheless its news pages are useful for keeping
> a finger on the pulse of Big Brother and his corporate Brethren.)
>
> In short:
>
> DARPA is researching the means by which every conversation you have,
> in-person, whether at work or with family or friends, gets picked up by
> the mic in your smartphone or other portable device, and stored on a
> server, where DARPA's algorithms and human editors turn all of it into
> fast-searchable text, that could be used by your employer, the military,
> law enforcement, and intel agencies. Presumably the credit bureaus,
> insurance companies, and financial institutions will want "in" on the
> data as well.
>
> Now connect that with this, about cell-site tracking and call detail
> records:
>
> "The government maintained [that] Americans have no expectation of
> privacy of such cell-site records [call detail records or CDR] because
> they are in the possession of a third party — the mobile phone companies."
>
> http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/03/gps-drug-dealer-retrial/
>
> The key point is that the gov's current position is that data stored on
> a third party's servers have "no expectation of privacy." What begins
> with CDR will eventually include voicemail messages stored on the mobile
> phone companies' servers, and then eventually all of your live in-person
> conversations that are stored "in the cloud."
>
> "Anything you say can and will be used against you..." Mark my words.
>
> Meanwhile people keep using gmail and Google Voice, and smartphones from
> which they can't remove the batteries. Because nothing is more important
> than "convenience," right?
>
> As a character in a sci-fi piece I wrote in the mid-1980s said, "Why put
> a person in prison, when you can put prison in the person instead?"
>
> -G.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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-steve
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