Department Of Homeland Security Counterinsurgency And Stability Operations
BY Herschel Smith11 years, 3 months ago
DHS facial recognition being tested:
September 20, 2013 – The U.S. Department of Homeland Security will test its crowd-scanning facial recognition system, known as the Biometric Optical Surveillance System, or BOSS, at a junior hockey game this weekend, according to the Russian news agency RT.
With assistance from the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, DHS will test its system at a Western Hockey League game in Washington state. The test will determine whether the system can distinguish the faces of 20 volunteers out of a crowd of nearly 6,000 hockey fans, to evaluate how successfully BOSS can locate a person of interest.
According to DHS, BOSS technology consists of two cameras capable of taking stereoscopic images of a face and a back end remote matching system. Stereoscopic images are two images of the same object, taken at slightly different angles that create an illusion of three-dimensional depth from two-dimensional images.
The cameras transfer the pair of images to the remote matching system by way of fiber optic or wireless technology. The system then processes and stores the two images into a 3-D signature, which is the mathematical representation of the stereo-pair images that the system uses for matching.
Using the BOSS facial recognition algorithms, the signature is matched against a locally stored database created from volunteers, using a combination of mathematical and statistical analysis.
BOSS is capable of capturing images of an individual at 50-100 meters in distance. The system can capture images of subjects participating from a specific distance, or be set up in a way that tracks and passively captures frontal face images of an individual as he/she moves in front of the camera.
As reported previously in BiometricUpdate.com, a $5.2 million contract for BOSS was awarded to Electronic Warfare Associates, a U.S. military contractor.
Recently the system was not deemed ready since it could not achieve 80 to 90 percent identification accuracy at a distance of 100 meters and could not process and identify images in less than 30 seconds against a biometric database.
This weekend’s test will attempt to rectify this deficiency.
Apparently these “volunteers” don’t have any problem selling out their countrymen. Folks, this is full-orbed counterinsurgency and stability operations. The Marines were first to do it in the Anbar Province of Iraq, and the best at it between all branches of the armed forces. They knew that to control the population you must know who everyone is, at least MMA (males of military age).
So what comes next? Sharing of information between the states and federal government so that the DHS has a full database of pictures (e.g., from a driver’s license). Fingerprints, iris scans, and so on will follow on.
Unapolgetically, out in the open and with intentionality. DHS counterinsurgency and stability operations. Just like I said.
See also WRSA.
On September 21, 2013 at 4:55 pm, Mark Matis said:
So is it time yet to pop the pigs? Or are we STILL waiting “for them to start it”?
On September 22, 2013 at 6:24 pm, Jeffrey Hall said:
Ummm, check out the source. Russian TV. Not that it isn’t likely, or common, but still, when it’s RTV or Al Jazeera…I’ll pass.
On September 22, 2013 at 9:26 pm, Herschel Smith said:
That wasn’t the only source Jeffrey. There were several. It’s the one I chose to use. Go check out the most recent featured article.
On September 23, 2013 at 7:25 am, Sam Culper said:
I used to work Biometrics. I need to write more about it, but this article is likely accurate.