| ▲ | doodlebugging 12 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
>Wi-Fi sensing as a broader technology could theoretically be used for surveillance if someone controlled devices on both sides of your walls. It's similar to other wireless technologies in that regard. The key is controlling your own hardware. Does this mean that a nosy neighbor or someone else who wanted to surveil your residence could accomplish this by placing multiple devices around but not necessarily on your property so that a mesh is created that effectively covers your residence? Sounds like a stalker tool or a tool for burglars to use to determine when a building is unoccupied so that they can get in and out without being interrupted. Wealthy homeowners, like professional sports players, have already become targets of burglars who use team schedules to understand when a place will be unoccupied. The NFL's Joe Burrow I think is the most recent victim. I guess the effective range of each device factors into this if you were determining mesh coverage. How would one protect their residence from similar surveillance? EDIT: I like this concept and see that this could help me here in managing deer traffic across my property. I would like to give them a reason to take another path so knowing exactly when they are on the property is useful data. Game cameras and ordinary security cameras set up as game cameras have a noticeable lag and so they don't send the alert until they finalize a video and by that time the animal has absconded, but not before chewing my fruit trees.  | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | mike2872 12 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
While theoretically possible, this would be a very involved surveillance method compared to simpler alternatives that already exist (cameras with telephoto lenses, thermal imaging, simply watching schedules, etc.). Wi-Fi sensing isn't easier or more covert than existing methods. At the current state of the technology, other methods are far more suitable for people who want to spy on others. The effective range of each device factors into the sensing area. The closer together the sensors are the higher sensing sensitivity it has. In my 90 square meter apartment I can create a sensing area with a sensor in each end of the apartment. Additionally, TOMMY is designed to only work with devices you've explicitly flashed and added to your system. It won't interact with random ESP32s that might be nearby. The deer management is actually a very interesting use case. I am interested in hearing your results if you decide to set it up for that.  | |||||||||||||||||
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