The reason the FCC is only allowing the sale of state approved routers in the US?
Ok now what router do I gotta buy and what firmware do I have to flash to plug this into Home Assistant?
and this is why you should flood your home with as many APs as possible. I have 17 APs running in my 1000sqft house.
can’t find shit if it’s too noisy.
“Oh my goodness, this is a nightmare” typed everyone into their government approved location recording devices that can show them cats and boobs.
Gimme cat boobs.
At this point I’d prefer the Chinese routers.
If you read the article ( https://dl.acm.org/doi/epdf/10.1145/3719027.3765062 ) they are testing this in an EXTREMELY controlled enviroment and directed subjects… I have my doubts that this could provide any insight on whether this is even feaseble for public surveillance, let alone effective…
I can tell you as someone who read the papers on very early deepfakes and AI video generation with amazement followed by dread, this is going to be feasible on a large scale in a short period of time. Researchers do stuff on an absolute shoestring budget usually, it’s incomparable to what large companies and governments have at their disposal. There are already consumer products that were able to become fairly precise motion sensors with just a firmware update. Next gen devices will be built with motion fingerprinting in mind, I can almost guarantee it.
The question with mandating US made routers may be either to protect citizens from foreign attacks - or to make sure every US router has a router with a government-approved backdoor.
On which option would you bet?
Why not both?
“Identify” seems like a very misleading word in this context. Isn’t it just detecting and locating? Or am I misunderstanding and they can tell me and my roommate appart?
Height and body mass
Ill just start wearing a mask full time when this happens. Fuck this.
You will be identified by the unique features of the said mask. And if you happen to move in public, by your gait properties.
That’s cool and all but if true, why use an animated photo instead of a real life example?
a real life example? you mean like a photo of a person next to a router?
I’m not sure what you think an “example” would look like. It’s not taking a photo of you, it’s measuring what’s distinctive about the way you personally mess up radio signals and how it differs from how other people mess them up. Internally it’s just a ton of numbers.
I assume they want to take those numbers and make a visual representation like a radar return or ultrasound image. Probably wouldn’t really look like anything but still it’d be pretty sick to impress your friends by looking at your 2nd screen filled with green matrix vertical scrolling shit and be like: “the cat wants out.”
Pretty sure this is old news? It’s basically sonar, which The Dark Knight predicted in the film.
Edit: a word
The first time I heard about this was in 2013 and, in 2019, I had a local government management class where wifi sensing in busy downtown areas and stadiums was discussed as a plus side to municipal wifi installations. In the latter case it was described as being available not too far in the future.
Right? Im pretty sure this is a few years stale and already incorporated in some isps routers
https://www.xfinity.com/hub/smart-home/wifi-motion
https://www.originwirelessai.com/isps-can-do-more-with-wifi-sensing/
https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/02/27/1088154/wifi-sensing-tracking-movements/
The statement from the article was the unlike previously, they used current consumer equipment, and could uniquely identify a specific person. I believe previous versions could just identify that there was “A” person. I don’t know that all that is true, but it is what the article says, and my vague memories line up.
Any reason this wouldn’t work with cell towers?
Despite what others have said. It could in theory. But could it work with ordinary cell towers today, probably not. I base this on the accuracy of current location tracking by cell towers. They still use triangulation from my understanding, and aren’t highly accurate at that. The space your phone could be in is large enough for many people to be. So the granularity just isn’t there.
This is probably because of the large range they cover compared to the power levels they use. But in theory if the density of towers were higher, and the power levels were increased, they could probably do it in at least some locations with the perfect conditions.There is another potential issue, which is the frequency. The lower the frequency, the less it will interact with an obstacle including people.
Yes, it wouldn’t really.
Right now the way this works is that a human body absorbs a certain about it wifi signal, so of the signal strength in a room dips and comes back up, someone walked through the room, for example. Couple this with what IPs and MAC addresses the router is connecting to, and Verizon can tell “human with laptop,” or “human watching TV.” So just “human body” or dog/cat are what it can detect. Verizon does try and sell this as a feature, as in a shit security feature.
So for cell towers, they’re too far from people in an already chaotic environment to really be useful. Trees, cars, and a million other things can throw off trying to detect already minute changes in signal density. Not to mention that the signals from cell towers are much stronger, so harder to detect the changes.
The imaging argument is just using 2.4GHz as a distance sensing radar, then using the normal transmitted wifi signal as the sender. In order to get the kind of image in the article’s illustration, they’d have to “beam sweep” the room, something that cell towers only do to a very limited degree (not nearly enough resolution to distinguish a FedEx truck from a mini-bus of similar size), and home WiFi barely do at all (I think some home wifi may do a little beam steering, but again, with nothing like that resolution shown.)
So, if the spies wanted to create a special (super costly) WiFi access point, it could “look like ordinary wifi” to an unsophisticated signal sniffer, but get these kinds of images. It also would be outrageously expensive as compared to an ordinary access point… unless they mass produce them…
Yes, however do you remember the big fuss over 5g tower tech coming from Huawei and how that is a security issue? Well turns out the 5g towers can employ beam forming for better connection with each phone. And the interesting thing is that AESA radars work much the same - so you can imagine what a nation wide network of these towers would provide for china in terms of air traffic information
Sure, but why bother?
Practically speaking, we all carry trackers in our pockets, attached to our phone number, email and social media. We already consent to giving away all that data, which basic ping triangulation also allows for fairly granular location tracking.
The wifi tracking method is helpful because it very granular in an otherwise opaque area. It tracks based on body size, who does what around the house, who specifically watched what on TV.
In that last comment, they said air traffic information. So think military aircraft movements.
I imagine resolution decreases with range
Edit: resolution not revolution
Revolution should increase the closer you get to a billionaire.
I think the main advantage with the wifi-based approaches is that they are usually used in a relatively static/calm indoor environment with a stable channel response and your motions are disturbing that, compared to a quickly changing outdoor environment (e.g. a city) where it would be much harder to distinguish individuals. Also, you are typically closer to the access points, making the power/SNR higher. Regarding mobile communication though, the trend is towards higher frequencies and smaller cell sizes which also give greater spatial resolution (and higher power) and some funky near-field effects can be used to get beam forming on crack: https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.10147 So perhaps it could work even better, wouldn’t be surprised
There’s no need, they can use triangulation since you’re almost always near your phone
Product idea: clothing with jaged edges and radio absorbing plates.
Funnily enough, indoors, this would probably make you more visible as the only area with no reflections. Stealth works outdoors because the sky does not have a radar return.
Stealth Bomber Jacket.
WiFi jamming underpants.
You can buy faraday bag cloth. It’s expensive.
Or just DIY using tinfoil
Don’t give Musk the idea of the CyberShirt.
Necessary accessory called cyberBra for that real car hood look
My understanding is that this catches disruptions between devices and router. I don’t think this would work. I would say you should instead sell a “bracelet” with “ancient Himalayan Salt” embedded into the silicone to absorb and cancel the tracking. It would probably sell a ton! Obviously wouldn’t work but $!
Well you can’t stop it from knowing something is there. But you should be able to confuse it’s identification of a specific person.
There is a project I can’t find now which uses an esp32 to create a presence detection system that integrates with home assistant and it uses wifi.
I know of ESPresense, but that only tracks your phone, not your body…
found the one i was talking about:
That’s super cool! Thanks for sharing!
“This technology turns every router into a potential means for surveillance,” warns Julian Todt from KASTEL. “If you regularly pass by a café that operates a WiFi network, you could be identified there without noticing it and be recognized later – for example by public authorities or companies.”
Later…
Inexpensive or older routers either don’t store history at all or keep it for a short time.
Newer models can store more information for more extended periods.
https://www.thetechwire.com/how-long-does-a-router-store-history/
We used to recommend people to run the newest stuff possible, but we came to a point that maybe it’s better for us to keep with older tech for a good while
Or go to more civilized countries for vacation to get not backdoored hardware.
From what I’ve just read, the tech doesn’t seem ready to identify people yet. It can supposedly detect hand gestures, but facial recognition I seriously doubt. But that’s probably just a matter of improving the tech. See this article for more info.
From OPs linked article…
In tests involving 197 participants, the researchers said the system identified individuals with nearly 100% accuracy. The recognition remained effective regardless of viewing angle or how the participants walked.
I can totally believe when it tracks a person it can tell when the same person walks by again later. But matching people with their actual identities would require a database of wifi scan data that simply doesn’t exist yet.
that’s a trivial problem to solve. combine this with a camera for facial recognition in a public space. then you’ve got wifi signature combined with the photo/video for facial recognition. then presumably you can use the WiFi signature anywhere else, even without the camera and be able to identify people.
I was wondering about that. The article didn’t say anything about being able to identify the same person walking past a different router. And I can’t imagine the study didn’t try. So I assume it doesn’t work.
That’s connection history. CSI motion detection software storing information it collects would be entirely independent of that. How much it saves and for how long would depend on the size of the router’s memory.
It would be great if there were some open source tool kits for this. If the technology is going to exist it should be in the hands of the people.
Damn, I thought I called it 8 months ago, but that was about reading heart rates using wifi…
Yeah it’s nuts. There’s also https://www.tommysense.com/ which is planning individual presence detection and location tracking within rooms using an esp32 mesh, but that’s closed source
MVP
No cameras (total privacy)
Seems not for long…
Yeah, if this shit has to exist, at least let me use it for presence detection in Home Assistant without having to buy separate sensors or something!
It would be amazing to not have to deploy a network of esp32s to do it with Bluetooth.
Although I’m already putting one in each room.
Probably just need a protocol to work with the data, however it can be interfaced with. Is it just measuring signal strength via speed over time?
If you’re technical you might like enjoy this article that explains how the tracking works. Basically the router can perform math on the interference created by objects moving around the room. It seems like this would have to be part of the router firmware, which doesn’t sound like a standard feature. But if it is, the fix would be to install modified firmware with that function disabled. The smoking gun will be if somebody gets into DMCA trouble for doing this.
New person in room detected, please drink verification can.
Opensource tech to do the same thing has been in the hands of the people for a long time. This is just a different way of doing it without motion sensors.
Or an open source hardware device that changes your “wifi signature” randomly.











