Health insurer taps voyeuristic vein to encourage behavior changes

Folks visiting America’s consumerist mausoleum, the Mall of America, are getting a lesson in dieting from a guy in living in a fish bowl for four weeks:

Scott, “The Human Do.ing,” will live at Mall of America from March 18 – April 16 to model daily physical activity and healthy eating and show how community support is a key factor in maintaining a healthy lifestyle. He will encourage others to join him in getting fit and eating right, thereby involving all of Minnesota in his quest and inspiring others to start their own healthy lifestyle journeys.

via PR Newswire.

Verizon's "Rule the Air" message: "Be the surveillance you fear"

Rules nothing. Photo: Ed Yourdon/Flickr CC

Given that Verizon allowed the NSA to secretly tap millions of calls in the past decade, it’s stunning to see the company selling surveillance as sexy and empowering.

I am referring, of course, to Verizon’s new “Rule the Air” campaign.

In what might pass for a scenes from a remake of John Carpenter’s “They Live,” Verizon’s ads have buildings, a parking meter and other objects flowering into antennae that stalk cell phone-wielding models.

One blogger (excerpt and link below), notes the disturbing surveillance theme in “Rule the Air.”

But it is not enough to say that “Rule the Air” is Orwellian, just because it evokes a surveillance state nightmare. (Invariably, when people say, “Orwellian,” they are referring to “1984.”)

Even more insidious, and Orwellian, is the ad campaign’s vague and contradictory slogan. (Orwell warns of the perils of using imprecise language in his 1946 essay, “Politics and the English Language.”)

The truth, dear Verizon customers, is that you rule nothing.

Rather, as you can read here, Verizon and the US Federal Communications Commission “rule you.”

If you ask me the whole thing seems a bit Orwellian and the Verizon red coupled with the vintage logo and the tag line, “Rule the air”, strangely evoked old-time war propaganda to me, but the effects are cool—and who doesn’t like the concept of reception everywhere.

via Verizon Sets Out to “Rule the Air”.

Swann’s latest security device has that sinister vibe – The Boston Globe

From my latest Boston Globe column, and the US Department of “Start Snitchin’”…

Swann made its name in the security business, with cameras designed to catch shoplifters and home invaders in the act.

But the company’s RemoteCam pinhole video camera, which will cost about $100 when it becomes available in a few days, is meant only for what I would classify as “offensive’’ purposes.

Journalists and police officers might find the RemoteCam handy for their undercover investigations. But so might perverts on the T, as well as private detectives spying on unfaithful spouses at North End restaurants.

via Swann’s latest security device has that sinister vibe – The Boston Globe.

Government will divine travel history from strand of your hair

The water will give her away. Photo: Julio Rojas/Flickr CC

I can see why some people in government might want us to start drinking locally. A study funded by a murky water forensics firm finds that the number and types of isotopes in water supplies are peculiar to each location.

That means a record of the water you are drinking, and where it came from — in other words, your travel history — can now be plucked from a strand of your hair.

The same goes for commercial drinks, which come with their own isotope signatures, based upon where their manufacturers get their water.

A snip from the study:

When combined with probability-based assignment approaches, collections of stable isotope measurements like these may eventually allow investigators to predict the original source of water used in beverage production from the stable isotope analysis of a beverage.

via Links between Purchase Location and Stable Isotope Ratios of Bottled Water, Soda, and Beer in the United States – Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (ACS Publications).

Tattoo will advertise your genetic flaws

Tattoos tell a lot about you. Photo: Laura Brechtbert/Flickr CC

MIT materials experts suggest that an ink made from carbon nanotubes can be injected into diabetics, to monitor their blood glucose levels. Patients can then check their tats for any changes.

Diabetics say this beats pricking their fingers throughout the day. But the tat — which might be partially covered by wristwatch with a UV scanner on the back of it — will also mean wearing your condition on, or near, your shirtsleeve.

The technology behind the MIT sensor, described in a December 2009 issue of ACS Nano, is fundamentally different from existing sensors, says Strano. The sensor is based on carbon nanotubes wrapped in a polymer that is sensitive to glucose concentrations. When this sensor encounters glucose, the nanotubes fluoresce, which can be detected by shining near-infrared light on them. Measuring the amount of fluorescence reveals the concentration of glucose.

The researchers plan to create an “ink” of these nanoparticles suspended in a saline solution that could be injected under the skin like a tattoo. The “tattoo” would last for a specified length of time, probably six months, before needing to be refreshed.

via ‘Tattoo’ may help diabetics track their blood sugar.

Freemasons in the child "chipping" business

Update: The Freemasons’ child-tracking system is now available in Canada.

The program is called Masonichip, and it is meant to help parents cope with one of their worst nightmares — having their children snatched from their beds in the dead of night — by taking casts of the kids’ teeth, as well as other biometric recordings.

The “chip” in Masonichip, is an acronym for “Child Identification Program.” There is no microchipping involved in the process of creating a dossier for any child.

But the name of the program is provocative enough, particularly when it is meant to  solve a type of crime that is extremely rare (link opens the PDF version of a US government report).

This, from an uncritical piece in a local paper, south of Boston:

The program, MY C.H.I.P., Masonic Youth Childhood Identification Program, is free. Each kit includes fingerprints, tooth impressions and a video recording of the child.Jon Bond, a lodge member, said each child stands before a screen with height markings and is asked a few questions while their responses are recorded on video.

via Parents can get ID kits for children – Quincy, MA – The Patriot Ledger.

http://www.masonichip.org/index.php/component/content/article/57-masonichip-expands-to-canada.html

New tech tracks you to the tomb – The Boston Globe

From my Globe column this week:

“Talk about function creep.

A new product, the RosettaStone (www.personalrosettastone.com), guarantees that RFID will follow you straight to your grave.

The RosettaStone is a palm-size stone tablet representing the deceased. It bears an RFID tag that communicates with mobile phones — directing users to an Internet memorial archive.”

via New tech tracks you to the tomb – The Boston Globe.

Nanny State's next stop: your bum

Whatever happened to, "I am honored to accept your waste?" Photo: Ingorrr/Flickr CC

And you thought recycling was a bitch: How long before they’ve got us sorting our poop and pee, Stateside?

Toilets that catch urine and feces, separately, are catching on with do-gooders throughout Europe, according to a recent study. Told that their waste could be sorted, and converted into fertilizer (yes for food, and yes, for human consumption), they were only too happy to oblige.

Men also say they are willing squat over the bowls to pee, in order to hit their marks in the so-called “NoMix” toilets — something that’s difficult to do, standing up.

More of the disgusting story:

“NoMix-toilets have drawbacks, most importantly phosphate precipitation (20) causing blockages, or the necessity to sit to urinate (practical issues reviewed in (21)). Nevertheless, NoMix-toilets are increasingly installed.”

via High Acceptance of Urine Source Separation in Seven European Countries: A Review – Environmental Science & Technology (ACS Publications).

RFID phones will soon work as credit cards at many checkout counters

Look for the NFC (Near Field Communication) logo on your next phone and, perhaps, everywhere else. (Photo: Courtesy of the NFC Forum)

Thanks to an agreement announced today between the NFC (Near Field Communication), credit card, and Smart Card industries:

With this new liaison, EMVCo will share relevant technical information with the NFC Forum that will enable the certification of properly-provisioned NFC devices for use in the following scenarios:

* to make POS payments (in Card Emulation mode) wherever such payments can be made with EMVCo contactless card products;

* to act as POS devices (in Reader/Writer mode) within the EMVCo contactless payment infrastructure.

This kind of all-in-one action through a single device should raise concerns from privacy watchdogs.

via NFC Forum : NFC Forum Forges Collaborative Links with EMVCo, GSM Association and Smart Card Alliance.

Coke's face-match trickery makes suckers of Facebookers

Barr. DavidAll06/Flickr CC

I sure hate what Bob Barr put us through, back when he was leading the effort to impeach Bill Clinton.

But the man makes perfect sense when he’s talking about the privacy threats posed by intrusive, government spy technologies.

Here, Barr reveals the problem with the ungodly mashup of facial recognition software and social media, in Coca Cola “Facial Profiler” campaign:

Coca Cola is a multi-national corporation which means it operates in conjunction with and under the watchful eye of our and other national governments around the globe. Posting a picture on Coke’s website or Facebook may on the surface appear to be a harmless act; but giving a multinational corporation access to a digitized photo of one’s self contributes to the building of a globally accessible database that can be used for facial-recognition cameras and systems. The privacy implications associated with having potentially hundreds of millions of digital pictures from people throughout the world in a database or databases is astounding.

via Facial profiling and Coke Zero game | The Barr Code.

The CIA-backed technology that searches your face for signs of “bad intents” already exists, of course.

Poppa Baard. Photo: Chris Taggart

This bit reminds me, by the way, of my own observation last October that Bob Barr looks like a Baard.