How Fashion Designers Are Outsmarting Facial Recognition Surveillance.

5Mind. The Meme Platform
Reason.com Header

Privacy activists say we should be alarmed by the rise of automated facial recognition surveillance. But transhumanist Zoltan Istvan says it’s time to embrace the end of privacy as we know it.

Every day, your movement is tracked. Your purchases are logged, your searches saved. And increasingly, your face is scanned.

Facial recognition technology is becoming more widespread daily, and governments are finding new applications in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. Privacy International reports that 24 countries have already implemented location tracking to help ensure compliance with quarantines.

So can we resist the surveillance society? Should we?

Kate Rose says yes.

“I think you have a right to consent to how your information is used, especially if it’s meant to be at some point used against you or used extrajudicially,” says Rose, the cybersecurity analyst and fashion designer who founded Adversarial Fashion, a line of surveillance-resistant clothing. Its wares include masks meant to block facial recognition cameras, and shirts patterned with fake license plates meant to feed bad data into automated license plate readers.

Rose’s concern about extrajudicial use of personal data is more plausible than ever in the age of coronavirus lockdowns.
San Francisco and Oakland have outright banned the use of facial recognition technology by law enforcement. Some technologists think such bans are overreactions.

“Suspending A.I. [artifical intelligence] facial recognition like San Francisco and Oaklandโ€ฆis idiocy to be honest. And lives will be lost,” says Zoltan Istvan, a tech writer and self-described transhumanist who is currently seeking the Libertarian Party’s vice-presidential nomination. Istvan believes that humans should celebrate and embrace the disruptive capabilities of technology to modify the human body and experience. He even implanted an RFID chip in his hand that allows him to unlock his front door.

Facial recognition technology “is going to be very useful to the human race,” says Istvan, “but we just kinda got to get over it being creepy.”

Istvan envisions authorities using facial recognition and other artificial intelligenceโ€“driven surveillance tools to prevent terrorist attacks by recognizing abnormal behaviors or suspicious individuals in crowds. Or to aid the government in fighting human trafficking.

Read Full Article on Reason.com


Produced by Zach Weissmueller and Justin Monticello. Opening graphics by Lex Villena. Camera by James Lee Marsh, John Osterhoudt, Weissmueller, and Monticello. Hong Kong camerawork by Edwin Lee.

Music credits: Songs from the album Paradigm Lost by Kai Engel licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike 2.0 license.

Photo credits: “Thermal surveillance,” by Dario Sabljak/agefotostock/Newscom; “Surveillance camera,” Caro/Sorge/Newscom; “Chula Vista facial recognition tablet,” Howard Lipin/TNS/Newscom

License
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)

Contact Your Elected Officials
Reason
Reasonhttps://reason.com/
Reason is the nation's leading libertarian magazine producing independent journalism on civil liberties, politics, technology, culture, policy, and commerce.

Think America Is So Bad? Think Again.

There seems to be a growing sentiment, especially among younger Americans, that the United States is some kind of terrible place to live.

People are Waking Up to Islam ย ย 

President Donald Trump is not the only one waking...

The Transatlantic Paradox: Why The West Curses Its Cure

I am less concerned by media bias than the deeper pathology: a self-destructive push by Western elites against their own societiesโ€™ interests.

CBS Sunday Morning Show Sides w. Palestine ย ย 

The CBS Sunday Morning Show suggests archaeological digs in the West Bank have contributed to displacing Palestinians from their native land.

Serbia Thwarted A Major Ukrainian Terrorist Attack Against Hungary

Serbian President Vucic announced that the authorities discovered two bombs planted along the TurkStream gas pipeline transiting through his country.

Federal Appeals Court Allows Pentagon to Designate Anthropic as a Supply-Chain Risk

A federal appeals court in Washington ruled that, pending a full judicial review, the Dept. of War may designate Anthropic as a supply-chain risk

Complaint Says American Medical Association Should End Minority Scholarships or Lose Tax-Exempt Status

A national group opposing DEI in medical schools urges the IRS to consider revoking a nonprofit scholarship programโ€™s tax-exempt status.

RFK Jr. Launches Podcast Aimed at Exposing โ€˜Liesโ€™ About Health

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is starting a podcast, he said in a promotional video statement released on April 8, 2026.

Pacific Justice Institute Defends Historical Integrity in Texas Education Debate

Brad Dacus Testifies Before State Board of Education on...

Trump Says Pam Bondi is Out as His Attorney General

President Trump says Pam Bondi is out as his Attorney General. Bondi will be replaced by her deputy Todd Blanche, who will serve as acting attorney general.

Trump Signs Order Imposing 100 Percent Tariffs on Certain Imported Pharmaceutical Drugs

President Donald Trump signed executive orders on Thursday raising levies on some medications and refining calculations on steel tariffs.

Trump Says US Core Objectives in Iran Are โ€˜Nearing Completionโ€™ in Primetime Address

President Trump will deliver a primetime address from the White House on April 1 to update the nation on the U.S. military operation against Iran.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central