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Loca: grass-roots, pervasive surveillance (sunday|kiasma)

kiasma. seminar room
2pm. sunday 17 april 2005

A discussion of the background to the Loca project, its artistic ambition, and the issues to do with ethics and legality it is seeking to address.

The first public presentation of Loca was a test and proof of concept in Helsinki during the PixelACHE festival in April 2005. Nodes were placed in Kiasma and in m-bar and logs made of visible Bluetooth devices over 5 days.

A person walking through the city centre hears a beep on their phone and glances at the screen. Instead of an SMS alert they see a message reading:

“We are currently experiencing difficulties tracking your position: please wave you network device in the air.”

Tracking digital objects in physical space

Loca is low cost, grass roots, pervasive surveillance; an exercise in everyday tracking. What happens when it is easy for everyone to track everyone, when surveillance can be effected by consumer level technology within peer-to-peer networks without being routed through a central point?

Loca aims to lightly touch large numbers of people. The aim is not complex interaction, but subtle affect. It will be like a picture glanced at sideways, a message caught in the corner of the eye, or a mosquito swatted on the arm.

Loca deploys a cluster of interconnected Bluetooth nodes within inner city urban environments, each one is built using readily available, cheap parts, and is encased in concrete.

Loca enables anyone with any device that has Bluetooth set to discoverable to be tracked. As the project develops inferences based on analysis of the data (sever-side) will guide communication with the Bluetooth users.

Bluetooth is the first ‘everyday’ network technology that enables people to be tracked, and to track each other, within the physical environment. The privacy trade off found in pervasive surveillance is common to all network technologies; it is not just data but also bodies in space that are being tracked. With all these technologies the only way to opt-out of surveillance is to switch off.

We are not asking people in advance. We dont want their permission. Then it would not be surveillance, but a performance by them for us. One principle of the project is that people should be able to participate through their own mobile phone without being given any additional technology, and without their own device needing to be modified in any way, either through installing software or by altering settings.

Loca is an anticipated accident. The project was initiated in 2003, out of an interest in how surveillance and social control emerge as a residue or unforeseen effect of otherwise virtuous information systems and network technologies. Then it sat in waiting for the accident to happen. The accident was when the Aware/ContextPhone collaboration started generating surveillance data, unforeseen by its designers.

Pervasive surveillance has the potential to be both sinister and positive, at the same time. The intent is to equip people to deal with the ambiguity and find their own conclusions.

Loca is an artist-led interdisciplinary project on mobile media and surveillance by Drew Hemment, John Evans, Mika Raento and Theo Humphries.

about.loca-lab.org