Karl Schonborn

Heroes, Villains and Fools

  • Books and Documentaries
  • Home
  • Blog
    • Cleft Heart: Chasing Normal
  • Resources
    • Cleft Palate Resources
    • Mass Murderers
    • Anti-Bullying Organizations
    • Mental & Drug/Alcohol Disorders
    • Links to info about Serial Killers.
  • About
  • Artworks
  • FAQ
  • Contact
    • Media
    • Links
  • Privileged Killers
  • Privileged Killers
  • Artworks
    • Paintings
    • Prints & Collages
  • Books
    • Privileged Killers
      • Book Discussion Qs
    • Cleft Heart: Chasing Normal
  • Discrimination
    • Sentencing Discrimination
    • Discrimination and Social Class
      • Educ/Talent
        • Intellectuals
          • Unicorn Killer
      • Occupation Discrimination
        • Athletes
        • Celebrities
        • Elites, Other
      • Income Discrimination
    • Facial Discrimination
    • Gender Discrimination
      • lookism
    • Special/Preferential Treatment
    • Racial Discrimination
      • Racism
      • White Privilege
  • Disorders-Physical & Mental
    • Birth Defects
      • Cleft Heart: Chasing Normal
        • Peyton Manning
        • Joaquin Phoenix
        • Stacey Keach
      • Orofacial Disorder
    • Drug and Alcohol Abuse
    • Mental Illness
      • Anti-Social Personality Disorder
      • Bipolar Disorder
      • Depression
  • Faces
    • Asymmetrical Faces
    • Facial Differences
      • Beauties
      • Uglies
    • Surgery
      • Cosmetic Surgery
      • Reconstructive Surgery
      • Face transplant
  • Heroes
    • Anti bully warriors
    • Artists
    • The Disabled who Rise Above
    • Idealists/Dreamers
    • Criminologists
    • Writers
    • Doctors & Surgeons
    • Speech Language Professionals
  • Villains & Fools
    • Abusers
    • Bullies
      • Cyberbullies
    • Criminals
      • OJ Simpson
      • Unicorn Killer
    • Mass Murderers
    • Psychopaths & Sociopaths
    • Racists
    • Serial Killers
    • Sexists
    • Super Villains
    • Terrorists
    • White Collar Criminals
  • Criminal Justice System
    • Courts
      • Delayed Justice
      • Injustice
      • Insanity Plea
      • Plea Bargain
    • Police Law Enforcement
      • Nonviolent Humane
      • Violent Authoritarian
    • Punishment
      • Parole
      • Prison
        • Prison Rehabilitation
  • Tutorials

Block face recognition, make yourself digitally invisible.

June 7, 2015 By Karl Leave a Comment

 

Cleft kids often want to hide their faces. That’s why they often love Halloween with its permission to hide behind masks. Adult clefts such as myself —and everyone else, for that matter— may soon be in the same boat as cleft kids. There may be occasions, and lots of ’em, when we want to block Big Brother, the NSA, or others from surveilling us.

For this reason, I’m quoting—in its entirety—a recent Raw Story article by  Janet Burns, AlterNet which is even more apropo now that the US Congress is laboring to replace the just-expired Patriot Act provisions on surveillance.

Make-up and the anti-surveillance state. 

“Last spring, designer Adam Harvey hosted a session on hair and makeup techniques for attendees of the 2015 FutureEverything Festival in Manchester, England. Rather than sharing innovative ways to bring out the audience’s eyes, Harvey’s CV Dazzle Anon introduced a series of styling methods designed with almost the exact opposite aim of traditional beauty tricks: to turn your face into an anti-face—one that cameras, particularly those of the surveillance variety, will not only fail to love, but fail to recognize.

Harvey is one of a growing number of privacy-focused designers and developers “exploring new opportunities that are the result of [heightened] surveillance,” and working to establish lines of defense against it. He’s spent the past several years experimenting with strategies for putting control over people’s privacy back in their own hands, in their pockets and on their faces.

Harvey’s goal of “creating a style that [is] functional and aesthetic” has driven several projects and collaborations, including a method for “spoofing” DNA, and via the Privacy Gift Shop, his drone-thwarting Stealth Wear line (clothing he claims “shields against thermal imaging…[which is] used widely by military drones to target people,” seen below) and the OFF Pocket phone sleeve, able to keep out unwanted wireless signals.

His CV Dazzle designs for hair and makeup obscure the eyes, bridge of the nose and shape of the head, as well as creating skin tone contrasts and asymmetries. Facial-recognition algorithms function by identifying the layout of facial features and supplying missing info based on assumed facial symmetry. The project demonstrates that a styled “anti-face” can both conceal a person’s identity from facial recognition software (be it the FBI’s or Facebook’s) and cause the software to doubt the presence of a human face, period.

Clothes and gadgets block face recognition.

Harvey’s work is focused on accessibility in addition to privacy. “Most of the projects I’ve worked on are analog solutions to digital challenges,” he said. His hair and makeup style tips – a veritable how-to guide for how to create “privacy reclaiming” looks at home – are “deliberately low-cost.” His current project – software to “automatically generate camouflage…that can be applied to faces” – will allow a user to “create [their] own look and guide the design towards [their] personal style preferences.”

Other low-tech protections against widespread surveillance have been gaining ground, too. Though initially designed as a tongue-in-cheek solution to prying eyes and cameras, Becky Stern’s Laptop Compubody Sock offers a portable, peek-free zone to laptop users, while the CHBL Jammer Coat and sold-out Phonekerchief use metal-infused fabrics to make personal gadgets unreachable, blocking texts, calls and radio waves. For people willing to sport a bit more hardware in the name of privacy, the Sentient City Survival Kit offers underwear that notifies wearers about real-life phishing and tracking attempts, and its LED umbrella lets users “flirt with object tracking algorithms used in advanced surveillance systems” and even “train these systems to recognize nonhuman shapes.”

Large companies are also getting in on the pushback against increasing surveillance. Earlier this year, antivirus software leaders AVG revealed a pair of invisibility glasses developed by its Innovation Labs division. The casual looking specs use embedded infrared lights “to create noise around the nose and eyes” and retro-reflective frame coating to interfere with camera flashes, “allowing [the wearer] to avoid facial recognition.” In early 2013, Japan’s National Institute of Informatics revealed a bulky pair of goggles it had developed for the same purpose.

A spokesperson for Innovation Labs claims its glasses represent “an important step in the prevention against mass surveillance…whether through the cell phone camera of a passerby, a CCTV camera in a bar, or a drone flying over your head in the street.” Innovation Labs says that, with a person’s picture, facial recognition software “coupled with data from social networking sites can provide instant access to the private information of complete strangers. This can pose a serious threat to our privacy.” Though AVG’s glasses are not scheduled for commercial release, Innovation Labs said that individuals can take a number of steps to prevent their images from being “harvested”:

“First and foremost, make sure you’re not allowing private corporations to create biometrics profiles about you. When using social networks like Facebook, be aware that they are using facial recognition to give you tag suggestions. Facebook’s DeepFace was already tested and trained on the largest facial dataset to-date (an identity labeled dataset of more than 4 million facial images belonging to thousands of identities).”

Holmes Wilson of nonprofit Fight for the Future, which works to defend online privacy and freedoms on various fronts, is more concerned with other types of privacy invasion than real-life image harvesting. “It’s pretty unlikely in most of the world that you’ll get followed around using a network of street cameras with face recognition,” he said. “It’s probably pretty likely, though, that you’ll get filmed by police at a protest. But [there’s] not much you can do about that other than wearing a mask.”

Wilson advises people concerned about privacy breaches through surveillance to first focus on the ways in which their gadgets are supplying info to third parties. “The place where it’s easiest to fight back against surveillance is in protecting the security of your messages,” he said, adding that message security “can be a problem for activists, too.” He said apps like Textsecure, Signal, and Redphone can make it “a lot harder for people to spy on you.” Wilson added:

“Phones are the biggest thing. Lots of people think of smartphones as the big privacy problem, but old-fashioned phones are just as bad, and worse in some ways. All cellphones report on your location to the network as you move around. That’s just how they work, and they need to send that information or the system won’t know where to send your call. There’s no way to turn that off, other than by turning off the phone and, for good measure, taking the battery out.”

In collaboration with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Fight for the Future recommends a variety of options for encrypting messages, password-protecting accounts and securing a user’s various communication and browsing activities via Reset the Net. Wilson encouraged those with specific privacy concerns to check out tutorials, resources and break-downs of privacy issues from Surveillance Self-Defense.

Last year, Facebook announced that its DeepFace facial recognition technology can detect a person’s identity from photos with 97.25 percent accuracy, only a hair below the 97.5 percent success rate for humans taking the same test. Currently, a congressional front is preparing to extend surveillance powers granted to legal bodies by Section 215 of the Patriot Act—the NSA’s legal foothold of choice with regard to mass collection of US phone records since 2006, and set to expire on June 1—with the light-on-reform USA Freedom Act.

It seems likely that a growing number of both tech-wary and tech-savvy people will continue weighing how best to ensure their personal privacy, whether by putting stark makeup on or by turning their phones off.”

 
 
 
My latest book, PRIVILEGED KILLERS, is a true story about a half-dozen Dark Triad people in my everyday life - narcissists, manipulators, and psychopaths. Three of 'em murdered people, and one came after my wife and me. Print and e-book versions of this (and CLEFT HEART) available at Amazon and elsewhere online. Also at your local bookstore.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CommentLuv badgeShow more posts

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Babe Ruth
Babe Ruth
Marilyn Monroe
Marilyn Monroe
Charles Manson
Charles Manson
General Patton
General Patton
Dr. Spock
Dr. Spock
Patty Hearst
Patty Hearst
Charlie Chaplin
Charlie Chaplin
Tom Wolfe
Tom Wolfe

Privileged Killers

 

Testimonials

I was really moved and excited to see the tale unfold. It’s a great story, an example to help others get through tragedies or misfortunes.

— Steve Clark

Recent Blogs

  • “PRIVILEGED KILLERS” -1/2 off Sale
  • Celebrities Who Killed People -Some Surprises
  • Soc-psych aspects of white-collar crime
  • “Dissociation (MPD)” resulted as Psychopathic Dad Trafficked her.
  • What to Watch After Netflix’s YOU Series Ends.

Photos from my Books

Photos from Privileged Killers.

Photos from the start of Cleft Heart , from the next part, the next, and from the end of the book.

Read the Blog

“PRIVILEGED KILLERS” -1/2 off Sale

      A True-Crime Memoir from the Inside — Not the Outside. What happens when serious crimes aren’t just stories but happen in places where you live and work? And involve  people you know? It shocks you, but compels you to tell the story somehow, some … [Read More...]

Celebrities Who Killed People -Some Surprises

    In one of my recent criminology books,Privileged Killers, I examined a celebrity who killed someone: Ira Einhorn was the wellknown  "Prince of Nonviolence" in Philly in the '60s and '70s and even ran for mayor of the City of Brotherly Love. Einhorn blamed others for killing … [Read More...]

White-colar crime

Soc-psych aspects of white-collar crime

  Sociological & Psychological aspects. With large scale corruption soon to be unleashed on us as business regulators have been sent packing by the Trump administration, we should refresh ourselves as to what constitutes white  collar crime. It does range from executives in … [Read More...]

Dissociation

“Dissociation (MPD)” resulted as Psychopathic Dad Trafficked her.

  I've written a good deal about the violent consequences of psychopathic behavior: here and here. And while I write about some of the the nonviolent consequences in my book Privileged Killers, I've not written about the dissociation result. As many celebrate the great things dads do on … [Read More...]

Joe Greenberg In YOU

What to Watch After Netflix’s YOU Series Ends.

You may know that one of my murdering "friends" in my true crime book, Privileged Killers, is a serial killer. If you don't know that, you undoubtedly know that countless Americans tune into serial killers when and wherever they can. The hit series You, is no exception.It features this cage room … [Read More...]

Recent Comments

  • Horn Blasters on Crime – Car repair fraud – Tutorial for all of us & True-Crime Writers. 
  • Jane Gatti on Crime – Car repair fraud – Tutorial for all of us & True-Crime Writers. 
  • Horn Blasters on Crime – Car repair fraud – Tutorial for all of us & True-Crime Writers. 
  • Horn Blasters on Crime – Car repair fraud – Tutorial for all of us & True-Crime Writers. 
Copyright © 2026 · Karl Schonborn, · All Rights Reserved · Site by AskMePc · Log in