In February of last year, Congress approved a bill that will allow as
many as 30,000 unmanned vehicles to tour the US sky by 2020. The Federal
Aviation Administration plans to open up national airspace to drones by
the year 2015,but one New York artist is launching a clothing line that
will keep you invisible to the robotic aircraft.
Technological innovations tend to solidify our current surveillance
society, but a new development in high-tech fashion seems like a rare
example of resistance. New York artist Adam Harvey has developed a
prototype line of “stealth wear,” clothing that employs both design and
materials to shield the wearer from detection and recognition by
surveillance technologies.“The anti-drone hoodie and scarf hide you from
thermal imaging, the XX-shirt protects your heart from x-ray radiation,
and an accessory called Off Pocket can instantly black out your phone
signal,” noted a release about the four-piece clothing line, which will
be showcased in a London exhibition this month.
This is not Harvey’s first foray into counter-surveillance
camouflage. For his masters’ thesis at NYU he developed “CV Dazzle,” a
form of “expressive interference that takes the form of makeup and hair
styling (or other modifications)” which functions to deflect facial
recognition systems. He explains on his website:
The name is derived from CV, a common abbreviation for computer vision, and Dazzle a type of camouflage used during WWI. Dazzle camouflage was originally used to break apart the gestalt image of warships, making it hard to discern their directionality, size, and orientation. Likewise, the goal of CV Dazzle is to break apart the gestalt of a face, or object, and make it undetectable to computer vision algorithms, in particular face detection.
His new clothing line was developed as a response to the swift
proliferation of domestic surveillance drones. In an interview with
Rhizome magazine, the artist explained, “I think building privacy into
modern garments can make them feel more comfortable and, like armor,
more protected. Data and privacy are increasingly valuable personal
assets and it doesn’t make sense to not protect them.”
Interestingly, the inclusion of a design element in “stealth wear”
that immediately blacks out phone signal was, for Harvey, about more
than protecting the wearer from surveillance through phone GPS systems.
It was as much about how we, as online subjects, actively enter into and
constitute surveillance society. “When I first modified my pants with
signal attenuating fabric, it felt odd to be unplugged. It was as if I
had blocked out part of the world, covered my ears, or closed my eyes.
But then I adjusted and realized that I had just opened them again,” the
artist explained.
I asked well-known livestreamer, independent journalist and robotics technician Tim Pool via Twitter what he thought of “stealth wear.” He responded that it seemed like a “gimmick,” but “not totally useless” — which, in the face of near totalized surveillance, seems worth exploring.
Source: RT
I asked well-known livestreamer, independent journalist and robotics technician Tim Pool via Twitter what he thought of “stealth wear.” He responded that it seemed like a “gimmick,” but “not totally useless” — which, in the face of near totalized surveillance, seems worth exploring.
Source: RT
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