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The Radical Hospital
Cutting-edge surgical spider robots, augmented reality guided clinical applications, RFID biometric-tracked patients, physiological monitoring, artificial intelligence—just a few of the radical technologies making their way into our hospitals. Hear first-hand how these innovations are changing the way medicine is practiced and how they are saving money and saving lives. Speakers include: Shiv Gaglani, Editor / Curator, Medgadget / Smartphone Physical, Dr. Gary Clawson, Senior Director, Global Professional Education, Masimo, Jason Mendenhall, Executive Vice President of Cloud, Switch SUPERNAP, Stephen Pierce, Medical Devices Leader, IBM, and Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer, Palomar Health.
Moderator: Shiv Gaglani, @ShivGaglani, Editor / Curator, Medgadget / Smartphone Physical, @Medgadget
WEBSITE: bit.ly/1cH4wGX
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bgQsTk
PANELISTS:
Dr. Gary Clawson, Senior Director, Global Professional Education, Masimo, @MasimoInnovates
WEBSITE: bit.ly/MasimoCorp
Jason Mendenhall, @jasonmendenhall, Executive Vice President of Cloud, Switch SUPERNAP, @SUPERNAP
WEBSITE: bit.ly/1jraXa4
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1dY9OQv
Stephen Pierce, @spierceibm, Medical Devices Leader, IBM, @IBM
WEBSITE: ibm.co/1bgRkr3
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/JR1Obi
Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer, Palomar Health, @glassomics
WEBSITE: bit.ly/193ppyh
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1krpnoA
The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®.http://bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure...Official Hashtag #DHCES ..News & Press Articles #DigiHealthCESPress ..CES Hashtag: #CES2014.Website bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite.Twitter bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter.YouTube Videos bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube.Flickr Photos bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr.Linkedin bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn.Facebook bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB.Google+ bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus.Instagram bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram..Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live. ..Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com
published this morning, trying to stop Israel's parliament from doing something really stupid, and really dangerous.
From a while back, but recent conversations of biometric passports and fancy airport security made me think of this hi-tech system I encountered during a period of heightened alerts.
1. It makes you wonder why the management didn't organise something like this to be manufactured properly, considering how serious a job it was supposed to be doing.
2. It makes you wonder what sort of clever little tinkerer took the initiative to make this in their own time with some left over MDF they had at home.
I'd give them a job over their managers any day.
I'd like also to think that they enjoyed the alliteration in 'baggage gauge'.
Bag-gage-gauge. Baa-gage-gage. B'gagegage.
032816: Office of Field Operations, San Diego - U.S. Customs and Border Protection launched a biometric border entry and exit control pilot program at Otay Mesa, San Diego in an effort to identify and apprehend foreigners with expired visas who have surpassed their permitted duration.
Photographer: Donna Burton
If you flip to the middle of my passport (at least since I got pages added in Singapore), you flip from a normal old passport into new biometric passport pages. Looks kind of odd and so far, at least the Indonesian border guard pointed at it and laughed. Good old USA!
I think it makes my passport have a kind of fake quality about it. They don't even put a raised seal in the new passport extensions, although on page B, I got a "visa sticker" that says "This passport was amended 24-jul-2007 to add additional pages."
BIO-EXEMPT
Zach Blas
Official literature on biometrics from the UK Home Office defines bio-exempt as those not required to submit biometric data to the government, and specifies that children, amputees with one or no fingers, and diplomats are bio-exempt. The UK Home Office also described bio-exempt as ‘exempt from control.’ In his performative lecture Zach Blas will attempt to understand ‘bio-exempt’ as a paradigmatic descriptor for today's global security regime. Bio-exemption is a mode of biopolitical control: who has the legal right to be exempt from their embodied self and who has the right to remain unmarked, not indexed.
Facial Weaponization Suite (2011-14)
Facial Weaponization Suite protests against biometric facial recognition–and the inequalities these technologies propagate–by making “collective masks” in community-based workshops that are modeled from the aggregated facial data of participants, resulting in amorphous masks that cannot be detected by biometric facial recognition technologies. The masks are used for public interventions and performances. One mask, the Fag Face Mask, generated from the biometric facial data of many queer men’s faces, is a response to scientific studies that link determining sexual orientation through rapid facial recognition techniques. Another mask explores a tripartite conception of blackness, divided between biometric racism (the inability of biometric technologies to detect dark skin), the favoring of black in militant aesthetics, and black as that which informatically obfuscates. A third mask engages feminism’s relations to concealment and imperceptibility, taking recent veil legislation in France as a troubling site that turns visibility into an oppressive logic of control. A fourth mask takes up biometrics’ deployment as a border security technology at the Mexico-US border and the resulting violence and nationalism it instigates. These masks intersect with social movements’ use of masking as an opaque tool of collective transformation that refuses dominant forms of political representation.
From left, John Wagner, deputy assistant commissioner of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection's Office of Field Operations; Anh Duong, director of Border and Maritime Division of Homeland Security's Advanced Research Projects Agency; Craig Healy, assistant director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement's National Security Investigations Division; and Rebecca Gambler,director of Homeland Security and Justice Issues of the U.S. Government Accountability Office, are sworn-in shortly before delivering testimony about the unimplemented biometric exit tracking system before the Senate Subcommittee on Immigration and the National Interest, in Washington, D.C., Jan. 20, 2016. (CBP Photo by Glenn Fawcett)
Delta Air Lines reveals their new biometric face-detection technology at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta, Ga. on Wednesday, October 17, 2018. (Photo by Chris Rank, Rank Studios 2018)
Just a random, irreproducible swatch of iris colour and fingerprint pattern, at a Wellcome Collection console.
More than 3.7 million South African Social Security Agency (“SASSA”) MasterCard debit cards have been issued to social grant recipients across South Africa, with biometric functionality.
International Red Cross focus group for Biometrics study. Held at UC Berkeley Oct 28, 2015 with students who have had experience with and/or an interest in Biometric testing.
Photography by: Mark Butler/American Red Cross
Employees with VeriScan make final tweaks to their biometrics device prior to U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Kevin K. McAleenan delivering remarks during a press event announcing the implementation of facial recognition systems at Dulles International Airport in Dulles, Va., Sept. 6, 2018. U.S. Customs and Border Protection Photo by Glenn Fawcett
Biometric access control system recognises a person by storing unique biological features of people in its system.
Delta Air Lines reveals their new biometric scanning technology at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta, Ga. on Monday, November 19, 2018. (Photo by John Paul Van Wert/Rank Studios 2018)
Property holders are on the lookout for security guarding professionals almost always since crimes now occupy a better part of society. Although security guards were the only option to take resort to earlier, a series of options are now available.
BIO-EXEMPT
10:30 - 12:00Zach Blas
Official literature on biometrics from the UK Home Office defines bio-exempt as those not required to submit biometric data to the government, and specifies that children, amputees with one or no fingers, and diplomats are bio-exempt. The UK Home Office also described bio-exempt as ‘exempt from control.’ In his performative lecture Zach Blas will attempt to understand ‘bio-exempt’ as a paradigmatic descriptor for today's global security regime. Bio-exemption is a mode of biopolitical control: who has the legal right to be exempt from their embodied self and who has the right to remain unmarked, not indexed.
032816: Office of Field Operations, San Diego - U.S. Customs and Border Protection launched a biometric border entry and exit control pilot program at Otay Mesa, San Diego in an effort to identify and apprehend foreigners with expired visas who have surpassed their permitted duration. Travelers cross over bridge walkway leading to a CBP Biometric Station where travelers will be processed through quick and secure Ready Lanes for travel into Mexico.
Photographer: Donna Burton
A very clumsy creation. This Bloomberg keyboard with complementary thumb biometric device is less than comfortable for anybody to use. By all means, this keyboard alone has had to contribute to somebody’s carpel tunnel syndrome.
Unique ID Card
Biometric data
all 10 fingers prints, Face and eyes (Iris)
see more details here
Blog
joegoauk-pointofview.blogspot.com/2011/09/aadhaar-your-pe...
From left to right: Venilla John, SASSA; Chris Newland, Grindrod Bank; Michael Miebach, MasterCard; Andrew Turpin, Grindrod Bank; Ann Cairns, MasterCard; Philip Panaino, MasterCard; Virginia Petersen, SASSA; Nanda Pillay, NET1 UEPS Technologies; Raphaahle Ramokgopa, SASSA; Dr. Serge Belamant, NET1 UEPS Technologies; Frank Earl, SASSA; Paseka Letsatsi, SASSA; Dianne Dunkerley, SASSA; and Anja Lewington, NET1 UEPS Technologies. The group were celebrating the milestone of reaching 10 million active SASSA Debit MasterCard cards at an event in Pretoria, South Africa, on 20 August 2013.
A VeriScan facial recognition tablet tells a passenger to proceed to the gate after taking a photo in the next phase of CBP's use of biometrics at Dulles International Airport in Dulles, Va., Sept. 6, 2018. U.S. Customs and Border Protection Photo by Glenn Fawcett
Ophrys fusca, O. lupercalis, O. forestieri, O. malacitana
“A la primera d’una sèrie prevista de publicacions, s’aplica l’anàlisi biomètric a dos temes controvertits dins de la secció Pseudophrys del gènere Ophrys. Les afinitats d’Ophrys fusca s.s. dels voltants de Lisboa (Portugal) amb les O. lupercalis polinitzades per Andrena nigroaena (O. “nigroaena-fusca”) i amb les plantes polinitzades per Colletes cunicularius de la provincia de Málaga, conegudes fins ara amb el nom de treball O. “colletes-fusca”, han estat llargament qüestionades. Anàlisis biomètrics de les tres entitats indiquen que hi ha tres espècies. Les plantes de Málaga es descriuen com a Ophrys malacitana. En segon lloc, seguint la designació d’un lectotipus per el nom O. forestieri del material original recollit per Forestier a L’Escaladieu als Pirineus francesos, un anàlisi biomètric de les plantes d’aquesta zona amb plantes conegudes com a O. lupercalis del Sud de França i Est d’España, conclou que son una única espècie. El nom O. forestieri té prioritat i el nom O. lupercalis esdevé un sinònim. Adicionalment, poblacions disjuntes del Nord d’España mostren diferències biomètriques florals, que poden indicar un canvi o variació en el polinitzador, mentre que la població de Mallorca és molt similar a la de l’España continental i a la del Sud de França.”
AOC
www.fotocommunity.es/mi-comunidad/fotos
www.facebook.com/pep.aguadetares
A flight attendant enters information into a VeriScan facial recognition tablet at Dulles International Airport in Dulles, Va., Sept. 6, 2018. U.S. Customs and Border Protection Photo by Glenn Fawcett
You can find out more about assessing various biometric authentication options by attending the Gartner Identity & Access Management Summit 2014 in London in March. Find more details at this link: gtnr.it/1aL2Hsp
The image is taken from the research note Applying Biometrics for User Authentication
Chad Shane, station manager of Scandinavian Airlines assists passengers in boarding an international flight using VeriScan facial recognition systems at Dulles International Airport in Dulles, Va., Sept. 6, 2018. U.S. Customs and Border Protection Photo by Glenn Fawcett
Biometrics
The mission of the Jacksonville Port Authority’s Wellness Committee is to empower employees by contributing and supporting their health, well-being and mental fitness through education, participation and physical resources.
The Jacksonville Port Authority has about 150 employees; however, the private sector customers and tenants who use Port Authority seaport terminals employ thousands of workers. According to economic impact studies, the combined direct, indirect and induced impact of the maritime industries in the Jacksonville area account for more than 65,000 jobs.
Marine industry jobs include import/export companies, container services, dredging and marine construction companies, freight forwarders, custom brokers, rail carriers, ship chandlers, stevedores, towing and barge services and trucking companies among others. Together these companies generate a tremendous economic impact on Florida's First Coast.
Photo credit: JAXPORT, Meredith Fordham Hughes
(Radio Frequency IDentification) A data collection technology that uses electronic tags for storing data. The tag, also known as an "electronic label," "transponder" or "code plate," is made up of an RFID chip attached to an antenna. Transmitting in the kilohertz, megahertz and gigahertz ranges, tags may be battery-powered or derive their power from the RF waves coming from the reader.
Like bar codes, RFID tags identify items. However, unlike bar codes, which must be in close proximity and line of sight to the scanner for reading, RFID tags do not require line of sight and can be embedded within packages. Depending on the type of tag and application, they can be read at a varying range of distances. In addition, RFID-tagged cartons rolling on a conveyer belt can be read many times faster than bar-coded boxes.
Source: www.answers.com/main/ntquery?s=RFID&gwp=13 (more info here too)
If you want to be paranoid about the security implications of this go here: www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2006/09/renew_your_pass.html and here: www.theregister.co.uk/2006/08/04/cloning_epassports/
Check out Renewin' Strathewen
Check out Work @ Dads
Finger scanner to keep track of students
"... A spokesman for the department says the software complies with the department's confidentiality and privacy codes, and does not record fingerprint images. ..."
This statement is a bit deceptive because no images are stored but a binary fingerprint is stored somewhere. Enough to identify each individual for the process to work. Using fingerprints for students is also open to attack [0]. Iris-scans would be harder to tamper with and a lot cooler. Probably a bit too cool for mere school students. And of course the obvious question. Has any asked why a roll call with teacher, pen & paper doesn't work?
a bit later...
@Bioauthenticator "... These systems are safe, secure and private. ..."
Spoken like a vendor.
Safe
In what sense? You don't cut your finger when you use them? Or safe in that nobody else can gain access to the biometric data and mis-use it later on?
Secure
Spend enough money and you might get hardware that is difficult to spoof. But we know how tight the budget is in NSW at the moment. [1] Is it connected to outside systems or applications? How is the data transported? You can secure systems but it's not a one off cost.
Private
Any system that stores digital information by nature can be exported, retrieved. What is to say at some time in the future all data taken (biometric and collected) at these schools are distributed to other government departments. Is there anything technically stopping biometric information being stored with CrimTrac [2] for instance? What about attendance at school stored with Human Services to work out why students might not be attending school or at Centrelink for future profiling purposes?
This isn't a technology problem. It's a rights problem. identifying data is being collected for questionable reasons with the potential for abuse. No justifiable reason is reported.
Reference
[0] itechnews, "How To: Hack a Fingerprint Scanner: MythBusters of Discovery Channel shows us how to hack a fingerprint scanner. Can a photocopy of fingerprint work?"
[Accessed Friday, 13th November 2009]
www.itechnews.net/2007/04/23/how-to-hack-a-fingerprint-sc...
[1] news.smh.com.au, AAP (reporter uncredited), "NSW budget to plunge into bigger deficit"
[Accessed Friday, 13th November 2009]
news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-national/nsw-budget-to-plun...
[2] computerworld.com, Michael Crawford, "Australian state police eye fingerprint biometrics"
[Accessed Friday, 13th November 2009]
www.computerworld.com/s/article/105427/Australian_state_p...
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Today UnitedHealthcare opened a three day clinic for employees to have their biometrics tested. No secret, I did not pass with flying colors. Last week my blood pressure was very high, but it has at least come down. I am actually taking a day off tomorrow, scheduling a doctor’s appointment, and going through the motions I should have done a long time ago.
UnitedHealthcare actually rebates employees for taking charge of their health. Through a point system, if we show we are checking our biometrics, doing our preventative examinations, etc., we can get rebates on our premiums. It’s a great way to build accountability and actually take charge of our health. I think this year I may actually take the advice of medical professionals and get healthy!
Year 5 of 365: Life, Love, and the Pursuit of Happiness
North Kivu, DRC, April 2015 - Biometric fingerprinting for food distributions. Photo: OCHA/Nadia Berger.
Chad Shane, station manager of Scandinavian Airlines assists passengers in boarding an international flight using VeriScan facial recognition systems at Dulles International Airport in Dulles, Va., Sept. 6, 2018. U.S. Customs and Border Protection Photo by Glenn Fawcett
New code of practice on retaining DNA, fingerprints and images.
An Independent Advisory Group on Biometric Data has recommended a series of changes to how such data is used by Police Scotland.
The Radical Hospital
Cutting-edge surgical spider robots, augmented reality guided clinical applications, RFID biometric-tracked patients, physiological monitoring, artificial intelligence—just a few of the radical technologies making their way into our hospitals. Hear first-hand how these innovations are changing the way medicine is practiced and how they are saving money and saving lives. Speakers include: Shiv Gaglani, Editor / Curator, Medgadget / Smartphone Physical, Dr. Gary Clawson, Senior Director, Global Professional Education, Masimo, Jason Mendenhall, Executive Vice President of Cloud, Switch SUPERNAP, Stephen Pierce, Medical Devices Leader, IBM, and Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer, Palomar Health.
Moderator: Shiv Gaglani, @ShivGaglani, Editor / Curator, Medgadget / Smartphone Physical, @Medgadget
WEBSITE: bit.ly/1cH4wGX
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bgQsTk
PANELISTS:
Dr. Gary Clawson, Senior Director, Global Professional Education, Masimo, @MasimoInnovates
WEBSITE: bit.ly/MasimoCorp
Jason Mendenhall, @jasonmendenhall, Executive Vice President of Cloud, Switch SUPERNAP, @SUPERNAP
WEBSITE: bit.ly/1jraXa4
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1dY9OQv
Stephen Pierce, @spierceibm, Medical Devices Leader, IBM, @IBM
WEBSITE: ibm.co/1bgRkr3
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/JR1Obi
Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer, Palomar Health, @glassomics
WEBSITE: bit.ly/193ppyh
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1krpnoA
The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®.http://bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure...Official Hashtag #DHCES ..News & Press Articles #DigiHealthCESPress ..CES Hashtag: #CES2014.Website bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite.Twitter bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter.YouTube Videos bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube.Flickr Photos bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr.Linkedin bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn.Facebook bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB.Google+ bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus.Instagram bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram..Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live. ..Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com
032816: Office of Field Operations, San Diego - U.S. Customs and Border Protection launched a biometric border entry and exit control pilot program at Otay Mesa, San Diego in an effort to identify and apprehend foreigners with expired visas who have surpassed their permitted duration.
Photographer: Donna Burton
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Jeffery Haney, an infantryman with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 167th Infantry Regiment, takes an iris scan of an Afghan National Army recruit during the biometrics phase of ANA induction at the Regional Military Training Center Southwest in Helmand province, Afghanistan, Sept. 23, 2012. Just over 1,000 recruits recently arrived to begin the nine-week ANA Regional Basic Warrior Training at RMTC-SW. Biometric screening is one of the steps to vet and screen all recruits in the Afghan National Security Forces. For more information about NTM-A, visit www.ntm-a.com. (U.S. Army photo by Bill Putnam/Released)
A VeriScan facial recognition tablet takes a photo of a passenger boarding an international flight during a press event announcing ithe next phase of CBP's use of biometrics at Dulles International Airport in Dulles, Va., Sept. 6, 2018. U.S. Customs and Border Protection Photo by Glenn Fawcett
032816: Office of Field Operations, San Diego - U.S. Customs and Border Protection launched a biometric border entry and exit control pilot program at Otay Mesa, San Diego in an effort to identify and apprehend foreigners with expired visas who have surpassed their permitted duration.
Photographer: Donna Burton