• sponaugle 7 hours ago

This is a VERY controlled environment - and they used 20 passes of each person walking with direct knowledge of each person to train for identity. They did no tests with multiple people walking at the same time, or with any other external moving distortion effects (doors opening, etc) . This is very far from actual 'identification' of people in real public settings - and no doubt the cell phone everyone is carrying with them offers many orders of magnitude better opportunity. In a real crowded environment this would be nearly worthless.

The devices that reported BFI information were also stationary, and there were no extra devices transmitting information that would be conflicting.

A single camera would be much more effective.

• notepad0x90 5 hours ago

Yes, but things could be refined. With more resources and research thrown at it, it could become more versatile, that's why the title of the post says "could". And chances are, there are private and government entities already doing this. Research like this has been coming out for at least a decade now.

Even Xfinity has motion detection in homes using this technique now:

https://www.xfinity.com/hub/smart-home/wifi-motion

• SubiculumCode an hour ago

This has already been an area of research, both publicly, and most likely in private/government defense research. In a targeted situation, i.e. surveillance of a household of 6, this would work easily enough...but I doubt there is enough information to provide reliable (high AUC) tagging of ID in a public scenario oh hundreds to thousands of individuals.

• notepad0x90 an hour ago

if it's a public scenario, you don't need that, they're using wifi on people's persons to id them. The concern is more gait analysis, and by some accounts even lip reading is possible with mm-wave 5g.

• Aurornis an hour ago

> Even Xfinity has motion detection in homes using this technique now

WiFi presence detection is a completely different problem. If the WiFi environment is changing past a threshold, return a boolean yes or no. It can't actually tell if someone is present or if the environment is just changing, such as a car driving close enough to reflect signals back in a certain way.

Doing mass surveillance where you detect individual people in a random home environment isn't the same thing at all. All of these "could" claims are trying to drawn connections between very different problems.

• notepad0x90 an hour ago

You'll have to explain that a bit more. Isn't the threshold detection analyzing radio signal data? For identifying people, you don't need to reconstruct their face or fingerpring using that data. you just need to fingerprint them.

With gait analysis for example, it's only looking at a handful of data points, the way we walk is very unique. lip-reading, i can see how that's a stretch, but out movement patterns and gait are disturbances in radio waves. If you're using just one person's wifi, that sounds difficult, but if you're collecting signal from multiple adjacent wifi access points, it's more realistic to build a very coarse motion representation, perhaps with a resolution no finer than 1 cubic ft, but even with more coarse representations, gait can be observed.

Even gait aside, the volume profile of a person and their location in the house alone are important data points, couple that with the unique wifi identifier or IP, you can make a really good guess at who the person is, and what room they're in.

• appletrotter 43 minutes ago

Insufficient granularity of data

• thesuitonym 3 hours ago

Yeah, it can and will be refined, but the major limiting factor is resolution. Wi-Fi radio waves are just too big to get a very clear image.

• notepad0x90 an hour ago

like i mentioned in another comment, do you really need good resolution for gait analysis? You also have people carrying their phones inside the house all the time, so you know what bssid is associated with that coarse movement. and if you have access to their ap/router combo, you can tell what IP that device has and what domains it's been visiting.

Let's say you visit a friend in a different city, the same ISP controlling their router, can use your mac, but even if you turn off your wifi or leave your phone in your car, your volume profile and gait can betray you. how you sit, how you lean, how you turn. I'd wager, if 6-10 distinct "points" can be made out and associated with a person, that's all that's needed to uniquely identify that person after enough analysis of their motion, regardless of where they go in the world.

Imagine if they're not using one AP, but using your neighbors AP as well, two neighbor APs and your own can triangulate and refine much better.

• mvanbaak 3 hours ago

for now ...

• XorNot 2 hours ago

No this is fixed by physics. 5ghz waves are about 60mm wavelength.

Your resolution limit is about 30mm as a result.

• NetMageSCW 2 hours ago

There are techniques that can reduce that limit when you have multiple signals, though whether they can be combined with this technique isn’t clear.

• sandworm101 2 hours ago

Only if wifi is radically increased in frequency, power, directionality or antenna size. And i mean way beyond practicallity. It would be easier to identify people by the sounds of thier footsteps, something easily done through anything with a microphone. With three microphones, you can track that movement to the inch.

• notepad0x90 an hour ago

or if wifi from mobile devices, and your neighbor's APs and their wifi devices is collated to build a fine-enough picture of movements.

• woodrowbarlow 2 hours ago

the article is off-base with wifi. the real story is in 6G cellular.

there is a working group at 3gpp, an EU-funded research group (6th sense, Open6GHub), universities (NCSU, Bristol), and many companies working very hard right now on proposals to include "integrated/joint sensing and communication" (ISAC/JCAS) in the 6G spec.

ISAC means adding mmWave to 6G (ostensibly for speed, but also) to build a high-fidelity 3d realtime "digital twin" of the real world that can see through walls, owned and operated by your telecom provider.

> A very exciting innovation that 6G will bring to the table would be its ability to sense the environment. The ubiquitous network becomes a source of situational awareness, collating signals that are bouncing off objects and determining type and shape, relative location, velocity and perhaps even material properties. With adequate 6G solutions for privacy and trust, such a mode of sensing can help create a “mirror” or digital twin of the physical world in combination with other sensing modalities.

https://www.nokia.com/about-us/newsroom/articles/nokias-visi... https://www.bell-labs.com/institute/blog/building-network-si...

there's been a testbed deployment in a German hospital for "non-invasive" monitoring of vitals; which sounds to me like it can literally see a heartbeat.

https://www.nokia.com/about-us/news/releases/2024/12/17/noki...

truth is, this is the nature of wireless radios. we can't keep improving bandwidth and latency without also turning the radio into a camera. i'm disturbed by the inevitability.

• testplzignore 2 hours ago

Bruce Wayne implemented this almost 2 decades ago in The Dark Knight. EU innovation moving at a snail's pace as usual /s

• mahrain 6 hours ago

Yes, you won't be able to do this on normal wifi traffic typically either, you need to send specific packets at a high enough rate (in between normal internet traffic) in order to sense with any accuracy, as I also remarked earlier: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46976849

• sponaugle 6 hours ago

Yea, that makes sense as you would need quite a bit of information across a reasonable temporal range if the identifying qualities are movement related. Very interesting.

• dylan604 2 hours ago

There'll be an update where a first responder can send a special packet to an SSID that will enable these high rate packets without needing to join the wifi. It'll be secure where only the good guys will know about it so that it won't be able to be used nefariously. /s

• BatteryMountain 4 hours ago

Unless they start storing data about your specific gait & posture, skull shape, limb dimensions and build up a "fingerprint" of your body.

• hsbauauvhabzb 3 hours ago

You mean like those scanners at the airport?

• Aurornis 6 hours ago

Exactly. All of these stories using WiFi to detect things with high accuracy are just extreme machine learning demos.

Given a tightly controlled environment and enough training data, you can use a lot of things as sensors.

These techniques are not useful for general purpose sensing, though. The WiFi router in your home isn't useful for this.

• t-3 4 hours ago

WiFi AP's already do a lot of tracking and measurement just to improve signal fidelity and effective throughput. Why wouldn't those same techniques be useful for more general object tracking? Of course using a single AP to attempt to track movement in real-time is unlikely to have great results, but with several APs and enough compute triangulation should improve results.

• Aurornis 2 hours ago

> Why wouldn't those same techniques be useful for more general object tracking?

These demos use machine learning to train against a known environment.

Basically, pattern matching changes in the signals against a very controlled set of training data.

You can use WiFi signals to detect that something is changing in the environment, but without the machine learning with controlled input data you don't know what it actually means. This is how WiFi presence detection works, but it won't tell you if it's a person moving through the house or your cat walked in front of the router.

• gentleman11 4 hours ago

today's tech demos are tomorrow's everyday

• spyder 3 hours ago

Yes it's in a controlled environment not in a real world noisy environment. But this is more stealthy than a camera and could potentially work with non-line-of-sight or even through walls.

And based on that I could imagine with a combination of a camera and this method, you could train the model on data where both the camera and this method is seeing the individual and then continue to track them with the wifi sensing + the trained model even where the camera cannot see them anymore.

But yea real world is noisy, so it could be very challenging.

• jajuuka 3 hours ago

Yeah I've seen this same type of study done over the years with the same dire warning. But like you pointed out it's just extremely labor intensive when it's simply easier to attack phones, security cameras or any other smart device that can be easily hacked. Or just install your own bugs.

Would not be surprised to see this get more traction right now due to the political climate.

• IshKebab 5 hours ago

Yeah this is one of those "cool demo" research results that is completely impractical in the real world that is sold (probably by university PR departments) as an actual viable technique that might have real-world implications.

We've seen it before with things like taking photos around corners.

And no, it isn't like the Wright flyer and a bit crap now but in 40 years we have jet planes. This will never get significantly better.

• vasco 6 hours ago

Well nowadays you individually track by using mac addresses and other network information from the devices within range. Cisco has some creepy real time maps of your location with each person walking around and all their previous visits etc

• avidiax 6 hours ago

Modern phones connect with a randomized MAC address. So yes, you can track a person around, but you will need another system (like the WiFi login page) to match MAC to identity.

• ffsm8 6 hours ago

Really? I thought it was only I phones that did that though?

• itintheory 2 hours ago

Android has been doing this for a while, too

• iberator 6 hours ago

windows 11 also has it.

• wcunning 6 hours ago

This is going into the next Wifi standard specifically to get this data off of normal wifi traffic.

• alexpotato 7 hours ago

Not sure how many people are aware that the newer Alexa devices have "presence detection" that uses ultrasound so they can detect when people are nearby. [0]

Heck, even Ecobee remote temperature sensors can do this.

Reminds me of the story about how the Google Nest smoke detector had a microphone in it. [1]

0 - https://www.amazon.com/b?node=23435461011&tag=googhydr-20&hv...

1- https://www.reddit.com/r/privacy/comments/asmusq/google_says...

• joe_mamba 7 hours ago

>newer Alexa devices have "presence detection"

Not even the biggest privacy issue of using Alexa devices. I think listening you 24/7 is a bigger potential issue.

Not sure if Alexa has this, but cheap mm-wave wideband multi-GHz sensors(or radars more accurately) now enable more finely grained human presence detection and also human fall detection[1] with the right algos, so you can for example detect if grandma in the nursing home fell down and didn't get back up, but in a privacy focused way that doesn't resort to microphones or cameras. Neat.

>Reminds me of the story about how the Google Nest smoke detector had a microphone in it.

Vapes have microphone arrays in them to detect when you're sucking and light up the heating element. Cheap electronics have enabled a new world of crazy.

[1] https://www.seeedstudio.com/MR60FDA2-60GHz-mmWave-Sensor-Fal...

• bradyd 5 hours ago

The Nest smoke detector microphone was never really secret. It was part of the monthly self test to determine if the alarm was working. It would send you a notification telling you it was going to sound the alarm and that it would be listening for the sound to confirm it was working.

It was listed in the features for the 2nd gen units. https://support.google.com/googlenest/answer/9229922#zippy=%...

Edit: That article isn't about the Nest Protect (smoke detector), it's about the Nest Secure, an alarm system.

• anigbrowl 3 hours ago

How many people have Alexa devices vs wifi? I got gifted an Amazon Echo Dot some years ago. We set it up and switched it off later the same day because it felt creepy to have the thing listening to everything we said.

• renewiltord 5 hours ago

That reminds me of the other story where the Pixel phones come with a microphone that turns on every time you make a call!

The phone actually records audio and sends it remotely to someone else.

• SketchySeaBeast 4 hours ago

Wait a minute...

• amelius 6 hours ago

Every capacitor can be a potential microphone ...

• srean 4 hours ago

Make that "every vibrating surface can be a potential microphone ..."

• devmor 4 hours ago

The laser on a hotel window experiment comes to mind.

• srean 3 hours ago
• spyder 3 hours ago

with a high speed camera any vibrating reflective object like a potato chips bag can become a weak microphone if you have line of sight even behind a soundproof window: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKXOucXB4a8

• palata an hour ago

This "could become" sounds exactly like when you look at a cool robotics project, and when you ask the researcher what it could be used for, they say "it could be used for search & rescue after a natural disaster".

The truth is that it's cool research that currently has zero use-case. But a) journalists would not write about that and b) researchers may try to use examples to explain what their research does. Probably researchers are tempted to find a cool use-case of course, because it's better for them if journalists write about their research.

This sounds like cool research that is not remotely close to becoming an invisible mass surveillance system.

• palmotea 7 hours ago

> The method takes advantage of normal network communication between connected devices and the router. These devices regularly send feedback signals within the network, known as beamforming feedback information (BFI), which are transmitted without encryption and can be read by anyone within range.

> By collecting this data, images of people can be generated from multiple perspectives, allowing individuals to be identified. Once the machine learning model has been trained, the identification process takes only a few seconds.

> In a study with 197 participants, the team could infer the identity of persons with almost 100% accuracy – independently of the perspective or their gait.

So what's the resolution of these images, and what's visible/invisible to them? Does it pick up your clothes? Your flesh? Or mosty your bones?

• mahrain 7 hours ago

What happens is that a large body of water (pun intended) has the ability to absorb and reflect wifi signals as it moves through the room. For this you need to generate traffic and measure for instance RSSI or CSI (basically, signal strength) of the packets. If you increase frequency you can detect smaller movements such as arms moving vs. a body, or exclude pets if you reduce sensitivity. It works well for detecting presence and movement in a defined space, but ideally requires you to cross the path between two mains-powered devices, such as light bulbs or wifi mesh points. Passing a cafe doesn't seem too likely.

If you want to do advanced sensing, trying to identify a person, I would postulate you need to saturate a space with high frequency wifi traffic, ideally placed mesh points, and let the algo train on identifying people first by a certain signature (combination of size/weight, movement/gait, breath / chest movements).

Source: I worked on such technologies while at Signify (variants of this power Philips/Wiz "SpaceSense" feature).

More here: https://www.theverge.com/2022/9/16/23355255/signify-wiz-spac...

• spyder 3 hours ago

You are confusing it with the earlier methods. This is similar but not the same method that doesn't use RSSI or CSI and it is passive.

This approach relies solely on the "unencrypted parts of legitimate traffic". The attacker does not need to send any packets or "generate" their own traffic; they simply "listen" to the natural communication between an access point and its clients.

BFI is much more complex than simple signal strength. RSSI is an aggregation of information that the researchers describe as "not robust" for fine-grained tasks In contrast, BFI is a high-resolution, compressed representation of signal characteristics. This rich data allows the system to distinguish between 197 different individuals with 99.5% accuracy, something impossible with basic RSSI.

While older CSI methods often focused on walking directly between a specific transmitter and receiver (Line-of-Sight), BFI allows a single malicious node to capture "every perspective" between the router and all its legitimate clients.

Also CSI requires specialized hardware and custom firmware, this one isn't, just wifi module in monitor mode.

• brk 7 hours ago

Resolution and positional accuracy are very poor. It’s more like ‘an approximate bag of water detector’.

Gait analysis is complete fiction. Especially with a non-visual approach like this.

• oasisbob 5 hours ago

Given the number of gait analysis publications over several decades using varying techniques, can you recommend a good review article disproving all of them?

• palata an hour ago

Given the number of publications about curing <pick your uncured disease> over several decades using varying techniques, can you recommend a good review article disproving all of them?

Answer: no need, if it had been cured, it would be cured. And it is not.

My point being that many publications saying "towards X" may mean that we are making some progress towards X, but they don't mean at all that X is possible.

• brk 2 hours ago

I don’t think anyone has ever tried to publish something disproving all of the gait analysis claims. That would be an odd sort of thing. But I have not seen anything come to something that we could call productized and reliable. It’s relatively easy to publish theoretical papers. Much harder to show it working reliably in the wild.

• throwway120385 7 hours ago

If you can do that you can infer when someone is home or away.

• mhitza 7 hours ago

From the paper linked by jbotz

> The results for CSI can also be found in Figure 3. We find that we can identify individuals based on their normal walking style using CSI with high accuracy, here 82.4% ± 0.62.

If you're a person of interest you could be monitored, your walking pattern internalized in the model then followed through buildings. That's my intuition at practical applications, and the level of detail.

• ghostly_s 5 hours ago

They tested correlation between different perspectives (same scene and AP even) later in the paper and achieved an accuracy of 0%. Not to discount other methods being able to achieve that.

• ghostly_s 5 hours ago

> So what's the resolution of these images, and what's visible/invisible to them?

The researchers never claimed to generate "images," that's editorializing by this publication. The pipeline just generates a confidence value for correlating one capture from the same sensor setup with another.

[Sidenote: did ACM really go "Open Access" but gate PDF download behind the paid tier? Or is the download link just very well hidden in their crappy PDF viewer?]

• lukeschlather 7 hours ago

It's at least possible to record heart rate with wifi, so that suggests a broad variety of biometrics can be recorded.

https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.24744

• barrystaes 6 hours ago

Android devices already know exactly where they are even with GPS disabled, because they sniff the nearby WIFI networks and then ask Google where they are. QED Google knows already, all combined is mass metadata surveillance already provided to those that tap into it.

Any sub-meter precision or presence detection does not really matter, if these companies have all your other questions, queries, messages, calendars, browse history, app usage, and streaming behaviour as well.

• kccqzy 5 hours ago

First this is not just Android. Apple does the same thing. You can buy an iPad which physically does not have any GPS hardware and it can reasonably tell you where you are. Personally I first learned of this feature when I bought a second-generation iPad, so it’s been there a while ago.

Second, it is a logical leap to assume Google knows everything already. They could for example build this nearby Wi-Fi based location querying API with privacy in mind, by purposefully making it anonymous without associating it with your account, going through relays (such as Oblivious HTTP), use various private set intersection techniques instead. It is tired and lazy to argue that just because some Big Tech has the capability of doing something bad therefore they must already be doing it.

• palata an hour ago

> Second, it is a logical leap to assume Google knows everything already. They could for example build this nearby Wi-Fi based location querying API with privacy in mind

In which world are you living?

> It is tired and lazy to argue that just because some Big Tech has the capability of doing something bad therefore they must already be doing it.

It has the capability of doing something bad, and it has a history of doing it. Better not forget the last part.

• oasisbob 6 hours ago

The approach described in the article is much different and more interesting, as it's passive and doesn't require any electronics on the individual being identified.

• NoImmatureAdHom 5 hours ago

This is a defeatist attitude.

Run grapheneos!

• Legend2440 15 minutes ago

I'm skeptical; this seems like a pretty crappy way to do surveillance. Cameras give you much more information.

• srcreigh 7 hours ago

Various cheating to get their conclusions (from the paper):

> To allow for an unobstructed gait recording, participants were instructed not to wear any baggy clothes, skirts, dresses or heeled shoes.

> Due to technical unreliabiltities, not all recordings resulted in usable data. For our experiments, we use 170 and 161 participants for CSI and BFI, respectively. [out of 197]

I wish they had explained what the technical unreliabilities were.

• prepend 18 minutes ago

I remember reading about this in a Cory Doctorow novel decades ago, Eastern Standard Tribe, I think.

• bagels 41 minutes ago

WiFi is already part of invisible mass surveillance systems, though not in the way described in the article. It's part of how cell phones fix location, based on nearby wifi endpoints, which is then sent to google, apple, every app, every advertiser, etc.

• jbotz 7 hours ago
• avidiax 7 hours ago

I don't feel that this article is a fair summary of the paper. And the title is just clickbait.

The paper says, in a somewhat contrived scenario, with dozens of labelled walkthroughs per person, they can identify that person from their gait based on CSI and other WiFi information.

This is a long way from identifying one person in thousands or tens of thousands, being able to transfer identifying patterns among stations (the inference model is not usable with any other setup), etc.

All the talk of "images" and "perspectives" is journalistic fluffery. 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz wavelengths (12cm & 6cm) are too long to make anything a layperson call an "image" of a person.

What creepy thing could you actually do with this? Well, your neighbor could probably record this information and tell how many and which people are in your home, assuming that there is enough walking to do a gait analysis. They might be able to say with some certainty if someone new comes home.

That same neighbor could hide a camera and photograph your door, or sniff your WiFi and see what devices are active or run an IMSI catcher and surveil the entire neighborhood or join a corporate surveillance outfit like Ring. Using the CSI on your WiFi and a trained ML model is mostly cryptonerd imaginiation.

• oasisbob 5 hours ago

Indeed. I'm confused by this line from the article

> a study with 197 participants, the team could infer the identity of persons with almost 100% accuracy – independently of the perspective or their gait.

The paper seems to make it clear that the technique still depends on gait analysis, but claims it's more robust against gait variations.

• ghostly_s 5 hours ago

The paper also makes clear they had no success correlating across different perspectives- welcome to science reporting.

• fragmede 6 hours ago

It feels rather more than a little bit creepy to realize that Comcast et al, and thus the US government (if you live there), laundered through 3rd party data brokers, knows if you're sleeping and knows if you're awake. Knows if you've been bad or good, for ICE/ATF/DEA/SEC's sake.

• avidiax 6 hours ago

Comcast is late to the party, then. AT&T has been selling your information for decades. And your mobile provider can track you anyplace that there's a cell-signal, potentially even outside the country.

• chasd00 5 hours ago

Funny how mass surveillance concerns are popping up here and there these days. That boat sailed 20 years ago.

• Bender 3 hours ago

WiFi Could Become an Invisible Mass Surveillance System

Highly unlikely and would be a waste of effort and resources. In the real world we are already well surveilled by cameras, microphones, satellites, cell phones, televisions, modern vehicles with a large number of cameras, web enabled doorbell cameras, refrigerators, AirTags, robot vacuum cleaners that map our home and monitor us, anything bluetooth enabled and that is even before actual spy devices like laser microphones that can turn most windows into a giant microphone.

All of these methods are far more attainable without trying to recreate microwave imaging that has been used by the feds for ages and the feds use a handheld device vs. this complex lab setup and this is even before we talk about advanced high resolution milspec FLIR which some companies have managed to get into serious trouble for selling to sanctioned countries for ITAR violations.

• diggyhole an hour ago

You're carrying a mass surveillance system in your pants pocket

• rubatuga 5 hours ago

I was really impressed that a ESP32 Antenna Array Can essentially make a WiFi camera - it uses both time and phase differences to localize based on MAC addresses (which are sent plaintext) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXwDrcd1t-E

• slicktux 5 hours ago

Yes, that’s a noteworthy project that has some good use cases!

• puppycodes 5 hours ago

There are much better invisible mass surveillance devices like the one you carry around in your pocket every day.

• downboots 4 hours ago

Elevator pitch: ankle monitor phone case

• blacksmith_tb 5 hours ago

You can do it to yourself[1], I am using Tommy for presence detection in Home Assistant, works great (my house is small, so two ESP32s works fine, I am sure having 3-4 would let it see my cat breathing).

1: https://www.tommysense.com/

• transpute 4 hours ago

WiFi Sensing is part of Wi-Fi 7 and present in most recent laptops and smartphones. Local NPU machine learning can be combined with WiFI radar. Malware can attack phone and radio basebands and exploit this capability. It can uniquely fingerprint human biometrics, measure breathing rate, record keystrokes and more. Thousands of academic papers have been published in the last 15 years on "device free wireless sensing", before the capability was ratified by IEEE as 802.11bf. It's being rolled out commercially. Mitigations include drywall or insulation with a layer of RF shielding.

"Xfinity using WiFi signals in your house to detect motion", 500 comments, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44426726#44427986

"Wi-fi signal tracks heartbeat without wearables", 80 comments, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45488908

2022 laptop demo of respiration sensing, https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/research/respiration... | https://community.intel.com/t5/Blogs/Tech-Innovation/Client/...

2025 biometric signature, https://www.theregister.com/2025/07/22/whofi_wifi_identifier...

> Researchers.. developed.. a biometric identifier for people based on the way the human body interferes with Wi-Fi signal propagation.. CSI in the context of Wi-Fi devices refers to information about the amplitude and phase of electromagnetic transmissions.. interact with the human body in a way that results in person-specific distortions.. processed by a deep neural network, the result is a unique data signature.. [for] signal-based Re-ID systems

• j3th9n 19 minutes ago

Who cares, we have nothing to hide.

• glitchc 4 hours ago

Caveat: Indoors. However, since indoors is typically a private space, the degree of surveillance depends on the owner of the space. Civilians can only compel government agencies to make sure that government buildings do not enable tracking. We won't be able to stop Walmart, they can always play the security card which trumps privacy every time.

• midtake 4 hours ago

Walmart has no need for this, they can already surveil you better with actual cameras and microphones.

• thedangler 5 hours ago

How good is ethernet over electrical sockets these days. I had one about 15 years ago maybe, but it wasn't that good.

Has tech changed. I'd use it over my wifi setup if its was fast.

• TheSkyHasEyes 5 hours ago

This tech is known as BPL(broadband over powerline) if you want to look further into it.

• ddtaylor 3 hours ago

I used the regular home power stuff many years ago and the speeds were pretty bad and the network loss was unreliable.

My understanding is that it has improved in some circumstances, but if the connection ends up "hopping" through your breaker you get back to garbage speeds.

In theory you can get 2 Gbps speeds, but in practice it seems like still around 500 Mbps. I don't know if the loss has improved but it was a significant problem before, since even a low loss will render a connection unusable.

• dpc050505 5 hours ago

Cameras just use light waves and are already a mass surveillance system.

• boring-human 7 hours ago

Could this be countered by wearing wire-mesh patch clothing, perhaps in randomized stylish arrangements?

• wmeredith 6 hours ago

Probably. If you look at the paper they wouldn't let their participants wear loose or baggy clothing.

• 9991 7 hours ago

No! That would make you stand out with the fiery intensity of a sun.

• 1e1a 6 hours ago

If the metal bits are floppy enough it should add quite a bit of noise

• nativeit 7 hours ago

How about personal canisters of chaff that get fired off whenever I enter a room? Before long, folks will get so annoyed with all of the metal fibers I leave behind, that I simply won’t be invited anywhere and my anonymity will have been protected.

• ibejoeb 6 hours ago

Reminds me of the xfinity in-home wifi motion detection, discussed here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44426726

• elias_t 7 hours ago

> In a study with 197 participants, the team could infer the identity of persons with almost 100% accuracy

That a super impressive! I wonder how that would be at scale, with a few millions people. I’m don’t think that would remain as accurate

• gnarlouse 5 hours ago

So, should I start walking around with a jammer or something?

• tosti 5 hours ago

Wait a minute while I don my tin-foil pants.

• cj 5 hours ago

What about rotating MAC address?

• NetMageSCW 2 hours ago

This has nothing to do with MAC addresses.

• TimTheTinker 6 hours ago

I don't see how this is categorically any different from hidden networked cameras. Perhaps that's the real issue we should be focusing on in terms of privacy and mass surveillance.

• misiek08 6 hours ago

Scary title, 3 month late into the party… really we don’t deserve better articles with non-dramatic content, much faster?

• ddtaylor 3 hours ago

Xfinity does it or at least say they do.

• an-allen 2 hours ago

Could? Is mate. Is.

• cauenapier 7 hours ago

Perhaps we should ask be using aluminium foil hat now

• toss1 3 hours ago

"As radio waves move through a space and interact with people, they create distinctive patterns that can be captured and analyzed. These patterns are comparable to images produced by cameras, but they are formed using radio signals rather than light. "

The concept sounds not unlike like the multispectral imaging produced by Geordi's visor in TNG.

Seems conceptually possible, but likely too much computing power and observing time (to build up and learn each individual's pattern in that part of the RF band), at least in current times.

I'm sure it could be developed to work in the field, but what is the use case where it pays off to make the silly-money investment to make it happen? Especially so when it's far easier to simply notice pings and get better data when approximately everyone always carries their mobile phone.

• bitbytebane 6 hours ago

LOL @ "Could"

Nothing says "out of touch with reality" like 'murcan media.

• kittikitti 5 hours ago

Beamforming information is utilized for creating this surveillance. There are also a lack of configurations in common routers to turn off BFI. The BFI information is available to any WiFi snooping and can easily be used to detect presence. You just need to read the BFI data (its plaintext) and if it changes, you can track wherever the smartphone the beam is now pointing towards. Detecting exactly who is another feature but in general, WiFi technologies are insecure and easily available as surveillance devices.

• bethekidyouwant 6 hours ago

I’m not understanding this. You still have to deploy a piece of hardware to read the Wi-Fi waves. Why wouldn’t you just deploy some other piece of hardware that’s better at surveilling the surroundings? Also, if the Wi-Fi device is in the area are not busy now your camera is off that doesn’t seem good. Also, I imagine you have to tune it for every environment, geometry that doesn’t sound easy. And then after all that work, I move my Wi-Fi router 4 inches to the left.

• NetMageSCW 2 hours ago

Because a device to receive WiFi signals could be hidden behind a wall outlet with no sign that it is installed?

• bethekidyouwant 6 hours ago

I’m not understanding this. You still have to deploy a piece of hardware to read the Wi-Fi waves. Why wouldn’t you just deploy some other piece of hardware that’s better at surveilling the surroundings? Also, if the Wi-Fi device is in the area are not busy now your camera is off that doesn’t seem good. Also, I imagine you have to tune it for every environment, geometry that doesn’t sound easy.

• bethekidyouwant 6 hours ago

I’m not understanding this. You still have to deploy a piece of hardware to read the Wi-Fi waves. Why wouldn’t you just deploy some other piece of hardware that’s better at surveilling the surroundings? Also, if the Wi-Fi device is in the area are not busy now your camera is off that doesn’t seem good

• bethekidyouwant 6 hours ago

I’m not understanding this. You still have to deploy a piece of hardware to read the Wi-Fi waves. Why wouldn’t you just deploy some other piece of hardware that’s better at surveilling the surroundings?

• josefritzishere 6 hours ago

There is no could. This is a turnkey function for any modern managed wifi system right now.

• NetMageSCW 2 hours ago

To detect and track people? As someone who manages a modern wifi system, I have doubts. This isn’t a could, this is a never.

• firecall 5 days ago

This reads like proper science fiction tech!

• october8140 7 hours ago

Can we make WiFi 2 that doesn’t let people do this?

• throwway120385 7 hours ago

Microwave frequencies like 2.4 or 5 GHz just passively allow you to do this. You'd have to adopt frequencies that are useless for radar.

I mean you could even jam a microwave oven door open, turn it on, and then measure how much energy loss there was through certain paths. That's essentially all beamforming in Wifi requires -- a really sophisticated way of measuring paths that cause energy loss, and a really sophisticated antenna design that allows you to direct the signal through paths that don't cause energy loss. The first problem is what's facilitating surveillance because humans cause signal loss because our bodies are mostly water, and 2.4 GHz radio waves happen to get absorbed really well by water. This causes measurable signal loss on those paths and the beamforming antennae use that information to route around your body. But they could also just log that information and know where you are relative to the WAP.

• AndrewKemendo 7 hours ago

“Could become”

Already is and widely used for exactly what the article worries about

• NetMageSCW 2 hours ago

Not even close. Now I feel like I need to make an X account that just posts headlines after s/could/will never/.

• bnjms 7 hours ago

Can you say what products make use of this technique? i.e. is it well known like Juniper Mist or not publicly available?

• mahrain 7 hours ago
• pimterry 6 hours ago

There's a big difference between 'presence detection' and 'tracking individuals'. Both in terms of tech and privacy impact.

• srcreigh 7 hours ago

Source?

• mgh2 5 days ago
• downboots 5 days ago

That's more than related