Researchers demonstrate improved system that "sees" humans through walls using Wi-Fi signals

Cal Jeffrey

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A hot potato: George Orwell's vision of Big Brother is more or less a reality. While most regions of the world do not quite fit the dystopian paradigm set in his novel '1984', you would be hard-pressed to find an urban place on Earth that did not have cameras watching your every move. What Orwell did not imagine in his premonitory novel is that Big Brother's eyes would one day have x-ray vision.

A team of researchers at Carnegie Mellon University has figured out how to "see" humans through walls using Wi-Fi router signals (again). The system can detect human shapes in 3D and interpret movements in real-time.

The team started with tech co-developed by AI researchers at Facebook called DensePose. DensePose is an algorithm that can map the surface of the human body from a 2D photo (or video). With DensePose as the output, Carnegie Mellon researchers developed a deep neural network that maps the phase and amplitude of incoming and outgoing Wi-Fi signals to points on the human body, providing DensePose with the necessary input.

The result is a live image that does not have the limitations of standard RGB surveillance cameras. For instance, a sensor installed in a room could detect bodies in the dark or hidden behind other objects. Of course, the tech is not perfect, as shown in the example images below. But again, the algorithm predicts the poses strictly based on Wi-Fi signals, so it's still fairly impressive.

The researchers mention "privacy" six times in their study, but all references paint the tech in a pro-privacy light.

The study concludes that the sensors are "privacy-friendly" since they cannot detect personally identifiable features. The paper published via Cornell University's arXiv repository envisions the tech as an inexpensive alternative to home monitoring and elderly care.

"In addition, they protect individuals' privacy and the required equipment can be bought at a reasonable price," the paper's introduction reads. "In fact, most households in developed countries already have Wi-Fi at home, and this technology may be scaled to monitor the well-being of elder people or just identify suspicious behaviors at home."

This naive viewpoint glosses over the fact that bad actors can just as easily use the tech to spy on their victims' activities without even entering the home or installing equipment on the premises. However, there are other means of peering through walls, and this is not the first time researchers have used Wi-Fi as the illumination method.

Image credit: Cameras by Henning Schlottmann, Dense Poses by Carnegie Mellon University

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Well you can kind of see around corners using very faint shadows , reflections and other light effects .
Suppose all types of waves can see around , sense below a surface - if right length , light , sound , waves of water etc. add in info from sensing imagers - a human produces 356 Btu's per hour).
If you go into an isolation tank you can really start to hear your body against the black background - apparently even your eyes blinking
 
I can see those amps in the mass effect game by EA becoming a reality. Where a soldier can see all their enemies and their movements on the battlefield even through walls
 
Does mesh wifi gives even better resolution? With Alex constantly listening and wifi constantly watching my home, soon it will only be me that doesn't know that I'm being burgled :(
 
Its a bit concerning how it could potentially let bad actors know where you are in your house, I am not a fan of this.

Some things are just better left un done. This might be one of them.
 
This has no good usage scenario whatsoever. I frankly can't see this even being studied with any kind of good intension. Their attempt to say it's not harmful for privacy because it can't identify person is complete and utter BS. If you know for sure who's in the building/room in a certain scenario you can identify a person with 100% accuracy. Not mentioning the fact that it can be used just to tell if there's any people inside and how many. This is clearly mean to be spying tool and it shouldn't exist in free society.
 
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