http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6968591.stm


*Sensor rise powers life recorders*
By Liz Seward
Science reporter


A person's entire life from birth to death could one day be recorded by a
network of intelligent sensors, according to a senior scientist.

By 2057, Martin Sadler of PC firm Hewlett Packard, said there could be at
least 1m devices for every UK resident.

Predicted advances in storage and cameras coupled with decreasing costs
would allow this explosion, he said.

But, he warned, the amount of personal data that could be collected would
lead to difficult ethical dilemmas.

"Maybe the first time you know you are pregnant is when a targeted piece of
advertising comes through on your computer screen offering you some baby
clothes because somehow the smart toilet, or some other aspect of your
environment, leaked that information," he said.

Life recorder

Already we live in a world surrounded by sensors and recording devices, said
Professor Sadler, director of the Trusted Systems Lab at Hewlett Packard.

Current uses include CCTV, wildlife monitoring, mobile phone cameras and GPS
devices.

A 2002 study calculated there were around 4.2 million CCTV cameras in the
UK, one for every 14 people.

Professor Sadler said: "The average Londoner may be viewed as many as 300
times a day."

The growth in the number of devices would continue to grow, he predicted.

"If you go forward 50 years, you are probably talking about one million
forms of sensors per person in the UK," he said.

This was a conservative estimate, he said. "More aggressive" calculations
suggest there could be 20m sensors per person.

Already some researchers at Microsoft, Hewlett Packard and MIT have
developed devices that record a person's every move.

Research like this, as well as advances in sensor technology and
manufacturing techniques would see a continued "slow and incremental,
year-on-year" growth in the number of devices that surround and monitor
people, he said.

This would result in a world where "everything we want monitored can be
monitored," he said.

Future use

A lot of the applications would be "innocent and harmless", he said.

"We imagine by 2057 our motorways, rivers and coastal defences, farms,
businesses, homes and neighbourhoods and bodies will all be highly
instrumented," he said.

But he said there would be potential to misuse the networks and the data
they collect.

"We will hit some of these scenarios when people suddenly think, 'Oh, I
didn't really intend to go there'," he said.

"I'm sure there will be a lot of after the event working out what we do
about some of the more invasive uses of the technology."

As a result, he said, people needed to make decisions now about the future
use if the technology.

"We have some real choices that we can make over the next few years about
how much we benefit from all this information... or how much it presents
some sort of dark future for us."

Public debate

Professor Sadler's predictions were shared by Oliver Sparrow, a scenario
planner who has advised the UK government and international organisations.

He said that advances in technology and a more complete understanding of
physics would lead to a new breed of devices that are "too small to see,
that permeate your body, permeate the space in which we exist, record
everything, know everything about you, transmit your reputation wherever you
go."

Both Professor Sadler and Mr Sparrow believe that there needs to be a
greater public debate about these technologies and how they are deployed.

"These kinds of things will be possible, whether we permit them, and which
societies will permit them and which will not, and how this will polarise
things remains completely unplottable," said Mr Sparrow.

Both were speaking at an event to mark the 50th anniversary of the British
Computer Society.


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