‘Minority Report’ Is 40 Years Ahead of Schedule:
The Fictional World Has Become Reality
By John W. Whitehead
“The Internet is watching us now. If they want
to. They can see what sites you visit. In the future, television
will be watching us, and customizing itself to what it knows
about us. The thrilling thing is, that will make us feel we’re
part of the medium. The scary thing is, we’ll lose our right to
privacy. An ad will appear in the air around us, talking
directly to us.”—Director Steven Spielberg,
Minority Report
September 28, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
We are a scant 40 years away from the
futuristic world that science fiction author Philip K. Dick
envisioned for Minority Report in which the government is
all-seeing, all-knowing and all-powerful, and if you dare to step
out of line, dark-clad police SWAT teams will crack a few skulls to
bring the populace under control.
Unfortunately, as I point out in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American People,
we may have already arrived at the year 2054.
Increasingly, the world around us resembles Dick’s
dystopian police state in which the police combine widespread
surveillance, behavior prediction technologies, data mining and
precognitive technology to capture would-be criminals before they
can do any damage. In other words, the government’s goal is to
prevent crimes before they happen: precrime.
For John Anderton (played by Tom Cruise), Chief of
the Department of Pre-Crime in Washington, DC, the technology that
he relies on for his predictive policing proves to be fallible,
identifying him as the next would-be criminal and targeting him for
preemptive measures. Consequently, Anderton finds himself not only
attempting to prove his innocence but forced to take drastic
measures in order to avoid capture in a surveillance state that uses
biometric data and sophisticated computer networks to track its
citizens.
Seemingly taking its cue from science fiction,
technology has moved so fast in the short time since Minority
Report premiered in 2002 that what once seemed futuristic no
longer occupies the realm of science fiction. Incredibly, as the
various nascent technologies employed and shared by the government
and corporations alike—facial recognition, iris scanners, massive
databases, behavior prediction software, and so on—are incorporated
into a complex, interwoven cyber network aimed at tracking our
movements, predicting our thoughts and controlling our behavior,
Spielberg’s unnerving vision of the future is fast becoming our
reality.
Examples abound.
FICTION: In Minority Report, police use
holographic data screens, city-wide surveillance cameras,
dimensional maps and database feeds to monitor the movements of its
citizens.
REALITY CHECK: Microsoft, in a partnership with
New York City, has developed a crime-fighting system that “will
allow police to quickly collate and visualise vast amounts of data
from cameras, licence plate readers, 911 calls, police databases and
other sources. It will then display the information in real
time, both visually and chronologically, allowing investigators to
centralise information about crimes as they happen or are reported.”
FICTION: No matter where people go in the world of
Minority Report, one’s biometric data precedes them,
allowing corporations to tap into their government profile and
target them for advertising based on their highly individual
characteristics. So fine-tuned is the process that it goes way
beyond gender and lifestyle to mood detection, so that while
Anderton flees through a subway station and then later a mall, the
stores and billboards call out to him with advertising geared at his
interests and moods. Eventually, in an effort to outwit the
identification scanners, Anderton opts for surgery to have his
eyeballs replaced.
REALITY CHECK: Google is working on context-based
advertising that will use environmental sensors in your cell phone,
laptop, etc., to deliver “targeted
ads tailored to fit with what you’re seeing and hearing in the real
world.” However, long before Google set their sights on context
advertising, facial and iris recognition machines were being
employed, ostensibly to detect criminals, streamline security
checkpoints processes, and facilitate everyday activities. For
example, in preparing to introduce such technology in the United
States, the American biometrics firm Global Rainmakers Inc. (GRI)
turned the city of Leon, Mexico into a virtual police state by
installing iris scanners, which can scan the irises of 30-50
people per minute, throughout the city.
Police departments around the country have begun
using the Mobile Offender Recognition and Information System, or
MORIS, a physical iPhone add-on that
allows police officers patrolling the streets to scan the irises and
faces of suspected criminals and match them against government
databases. In fact, in 2014, the FBI launched a
nationwide database of iris scans for use by law enforcement
agencies in their efforts to track criminals.
Corporations, as well, are beginning to implement
eye-tracking technology in their tablets, smartphones, and
computers. It will allow companies to track which words and phrases
the user tends to re-read, hover on, or avoid, which can give
insight into what she is thinking. This will allow advertisers to
expand on the information they glean from tracking users’ clicks,
searches, and online purchases, expanding into the realm of trying
to guess what a user is thinking based upon their eye movements, and
advertising accordingly. This information as it is shared by the
corporate elite with the police will come in handy for police
agencies as well, some of which are working on developing predictive
analysis of “blink rates, pupil dilation, and deception.”
In ideal conditions, facial-recognition software
is accurate 99.7 percent of the time. We are right around the corner
from billboards capable of identifying passersby, and IBM has
already been working on creating real world advertisements that
react to people based upon RFID chips embedded in licenses and
credit cards.
FICTION: In Minority Report, John
Anderton’s Pre-Crime division utilizes psychic mutant humans to
determine when a crime will take place next.
REALITY CHECK: While no psychic mutants are
powering the government’s predictive policing efforts, the end
result remains the same: a world in which crimes are prevented
through the use of sophisticated data mining, surveillance,
community policing and precrime. For instance,
police in major American cities have been test-driving a tool that
allows them to identify individuals—or groups of individuals—most
likely to commit a crime in a given community. Those individuals
are then put on notice that their movements and activities will be
closely monitored and any criminal activity (by them or their
associates) will result in harsh penalties. In other words, you are
guilty before you are given any chance to prove you are innocent.
The Department of Homeland Security is also
working on its Future Attribute Screening Technology, or FAST, which
will utilize a number of personal factors such as “ethnicity,
gender, breathing, and heart rate to ‘detect cues indicative of
mal-intent.’”
FICTION: In Minority Report, government
agents use “sick sticks” to subdue criminal suspects using
less-lethal methods.
REALITY CHECK: A variety of less-lethal weapons
have been developed in the years since Minority Report hit
theaters. In 2007, the Department of Homeland Security granted a
contract to Intelligent Optical Systems, Inc., for an “LED
Incapacitator,” a flashlight-like device that emits a dazzling array
of pulsating lights, incapacitating its target by causing nausea and
vomiting. Raytheon has created an “Assault Intervention Device”
which is basically a heat ray that causes an unbearable burning
sensation on its victim’s skin. The Long Range Acoustic Device,
which emits painful noises in order to disperse crowds, has been
seen at the London Olympics and G20 protests in Pittsburgh.
FICTION: A hacker captures visions from the
“precog” Agatha’s mind and plays them for John Anderton.
REALITY CHECK: While still in its infancy,
technology that seeks to translate human thoughts into computer
actions is slowly becoming a reality. Jack Gallant, a neuroscientist
at UC Berkeley, and his research team have created primitive
software capable of translating the thoughts of viewers into
reconstructed visual images. A company named Emotiv is developing
technology which will be capable of reading a user’s thoughts and
using them as inputs for operating machinery, like voice recognition
but with brain signals. Similar devices are being created to
translate thoughts into speech.
FICTION: In Minority Report, tiny
sensory-guided spider robots converge on John Anderton, scan his
biometric data and feed it into a central government database.
REALITY CHECK: An agency with the Department of
Defense is working on turning insects into living UAVs, or “cybugs.”
By expanding upon the insects’ natural abilities (e.g., bees’
olfactory abilities being utilized for bomb detection, etc.),
government agents hope to use these spy bugs to surreptitiously
gather vast quantities of information. Researchers eventually hope
to outfit June beetles with tiny backpacks complete with various
detection devices, microphones, and cameras. These devices could be
powered by the very energy produced by the bugs beating their wings,
or the heat they give off while in flight. There have already been
reported sightings of dragonfly-like robotic drones monitoring
protesters aerially in Washington, DC, as early as 2007.
FICTION: In Minority Report, Anderton
flees his pursuers in a car whose movements are tracked by the
police through the use of onboard computers. All around him,
autonomous, driver-less vehicles zip through the city, moving people
to their destinations based upon simple voice commands.
REALITY CHECK: Congress is now requiring that all
new cars come equipped with event data recorders that can record and
transmit data from onboard computers. Similarly, insurance companies
are offering discounts to drivers who agree to have tracking bugs
installed. Google has also created self-driving cars which have
already surpassed 300,000 miles of road testing. It is anticipated
that self-driving cars could be on American roads within the next 20
years, if not sooner.
These are but a few of the technological devices
now in the hands of those who control the corporate police state.
Fiction, in essence, has become fact—albeit, a rather frightening
one.
John W. Whitehead is an attorney and author who
has written, debated and practiced widely in the area of
constitutional law and human rights. Whitehead's concern for the
persecuted and oppressed led him, in 1982, to establish The
Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil liberties and human rights
organization whose international headquarters are located in
Charlottesville, Virginia. Whitehead serves as the Institute’s
president and spokesperson, in addition to writing a weekly
commentary that is posted on The Rutherford Institute’s website (www.rutherford.org)
Copyright 2015 © The Rutherford Institute