Today a company or agency with a
$10 million hardware budget can buy
processing power equivalent to 2,000
workstations, two petabytes of hard drive
space (two million gigabytes, or 50,000
standard 40-gigabyte hard drives like
those found on today's PCs), and a two-
gigabit Internet connection (more than
2,000 times the capacity of a typical home
broadband connection). If current trends
continue, simple arithmetic predicts that
in 20 years the same purchasing power
will buy the processing capability of 10
million of today's workstations, 200
exabytes (200 million gigabytes) of storage capacity, and 200 exabits (200 million
megabits) of bandwidth. Another way
of saying this is that by 2023 large organizations will be able to devote the
equivalent of a contemporary PC to monitoring every single one of the 330
million people who will then be living in
the United States.
One of the first applications for this
combination of surveillance and compu-
tational power,says Raghu Ramakrishnan,
a database researcher at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, will be continuous
intensive monitoring of buildings,offices,
and stores: the spaces where middle-class
people spend most of their lives. Surveillance in the workplace is common now: in
2001, according to the American Management Association survey, 77.7 percent
of major U.S. corporations electronically
monitored their employees, and that
statistic had more than doubled since
1997. But
much more is on the way. Companies
like Johnson Controls and Siemens,
Ramakrishnan says, are already "doing
simplistic kinds of ‘asset tracking,'as they
call it." They use radio frequency identification tags to monitor the locations of
people as well as inventory. In January,
Gillette began attaching such tags to 500
million of its Mach 3 Turbo razors. Special "smart shelves" at Wal-Mart stores
will record the removal of razors by shop-
pers, thereby alerting stock clerks whenever shelves need to be refilled—and effectively transforming Gillette customers
into walking radio beacons. In the future,
such tags will be used by hospitals to
ensure that patients and staff maintain
quarantines,by law offices to keep visitors
from straying into rooms containing
clients' confidential papers,and in kindergartens to track toddlers.
By employing multiple, overlapping
types of monitoring, Ramakrishnan says,
managers will be able to "keep track of
people, objects, and environmental levels
throughout a whole complex." Initially,
these networks will be installed for "such
mundane things as trying to figure out
when to replace the carpets or which
areas of lawn get the most traffic so you
need to spread some grass seed preven-
tively."But as computers and monitoring
equipment become cheaper and more
powerful, managers will use surveillance
data to construct complex, multidimensional records of how spaces are used. The
models will be analyzed to improve efficiency and security—and they will be
sold to other businesses or governments.
Over time, the thousands of individual
monitoring schemes inevitably will merge
together and feed their data into large
commercial and state-owned networks.
When surveillance databases can describe
or depict what every individual is doing
at a particular time, Ramakrishnan says,
they will be providing humankind with
the digital equivalent of an ancient dream:
being "present, in effect, almost anywhere
and anytime."
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