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Biometric Face Recognition Danger


Biometric Face Recognition is Being Used for NWO. The Government Continues to Expand It’s Ability to Invade Our Privacy and Put Us Into Their Police-State Matrix.


Biometric face recognition isn’t just a thing of the future anymore and our guess is that 2009 is the year that facial recognition goes live in many countries, including the United States.

Constitutional influence and privacy guarantees are things of the past. Facial recognition works with the use of a software program that creates and then uses a template of a subject to compare to other templates.

The computer examines the subject’s face, allowing the software to take measurements such as the distance from nose to mouth and between the eyes.

Angles of certain characteristics are noted, such as the angle of the jaw and forehead. All of this information is used to build a distinctive template which is then compared to other templates in huge databases until matches are found.

The software will come up with several matches and give each one a score based on how similar the image is to the original.

Biometric face recognition is already being used in some airports in the United States, and many international airports in several countries are working towards adding facial recognition systems to their security structure.

Law enforcement and security officials consider facial recognition to be the ideal forensic and security breakthrough in a long time, going so far as to think of it as a foolproof way to catch criminals.

Once nothing more than a science fiction dream, biometrics will soon be a part of everyday life.



Violation of Basic Right to Privacy

Most people in the United States are against the use of facial recognition because it violates our basic right to privacy.

This type of invasive identification technique allows for the tracking of all our movements each and every time we enter an area that is controlled by a biometric system.

Although it can’t be disputed that biometric face recognition can be a useful tool to fight against criminals and terrorists, it also raises many fears and concerns that we’re losing the ability to control our personal information.

Our privacy and our anonymity are being taken by the government.

And, even though we may be completely innocent of any crimes, who we are, where we go and what we are do are all being monitored by people we can’t see.


Tracking

Facial recognition systems will allow law enforcement and government to follow a person and keep track of them.

As biometric face recognition technology becomes even more advanced the system will not only be able to follow individuals in real time but also to search through databases and find out where they’ve been in the past.

People can be placed on a “watch list” anytime government wants to keep an eye on them.

Cameras will grab the face print of the subject they are tracking and then transmit information back to whomever is conducting the surveillance.

Facial templates can then be created of every other person the subject comes into contact with while being track and these people can then be tracked.

Although this may be extreme and sound as though it’s straight out of a science fiction movie, it’s a reality facing us today.

Security officials argue that facial recognition is a non-evasive way to keep track of people, but what this really means is that we’ll never know when we’re being watched.


Big Brother Watching

There soon won’t be anywhere that we can go where we’re not being watched and monitored.

Not only are the police and government planning to implement biometric face recognition systems, private businesses and shopping malls will soon be joining them.

What makes it worse is that this surveillance will be unnoticeable, omnipresent, and able to keep track of us both in real time and past time.

The trail we leave of where we’ve been and what we’ve been doing has the potential to be sold to third parties who have a vested interest in knowing more than they should about our private lives.

There is also the potential for error.

In June of 2001, Rob Milliron from Florida had his picture taken without his knowledge by a hidden facial recognition camera that had been installed by the government for the purpose of identifying sex offenders and felons.

Police officials sent Milliron’s photo to the press, and even though he wasn’t a match as a sex offender or criminal, his picture still appeared in a magazine with these words beside it: “You can’t hide those lying eyes in Tampa.”

Tampa stopped using its facial recognition system a couple of years later, but for Milliron, even though he was able to prove that he was a victim of mistaken identity, the damage had been done.

Government now has a way to watch us not matter where we go or what we do.

And you can be sure they’ll try to implement facial recognition systems wherever they can so they can have even more control over us than they already do.





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