They also argue that this technology offers an improvement in privacy rights as it does not rely on cameras, and the required equipment can be bought at a reasonable price. Most households in developed countries already have WiFi at home, and this technology may be used to monitor the well-being of older people or identify suspicious behaviors at home.
So making it cheaper to spy on people through walls, so that everyone can do it, IMPROVES privacy rights. I guess I need to be a Carnegie Mellon researcher to grasp this.
> They also argue that this technology offers an improvement in privacy rights as it does not rely on cameras, and the required equipment can be bought at a reasonable price. Most households in developed countries already have WiFi at home, and this technology may be used to monitor the well-being of older people or identify suspicious behaviors at home.
So making it cheaper to spy on people through walls, so that everyone can do it, **IMPROVES** privacy rights. I guess I need to be a Carnegie Mellon researcher to grasp this.
(post is archived)