New camera tech can detect blood and water content in your car. Ew.
Ever on the lookout for the next step in up in Big Brother policy, there's a new camera technology being developed in the UK at Loughborough University which can count car occupants by figuring out how much water and blood content there is inside the car. The obvious application is for trimming down those carpool lane offenders, trying to squeeze by the law with a dummy or a pet in the passenger seat. Look, privacy concerns aside, there's just something awkward about traffic cams tracking quantities of blood and water inside of commuter cars. Do we really want to let the Machines have that kind of inside (literally) information on us?
[Thanks, Richard W]
[Thanks, Richard W]



















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Grey Acumen @ Feb 24th 2008 9:12AM
Easy to beat. Just fill up a blow up doll with water, add in some iron, maybe some gelatin mix. Might possibly need a heater to keep the water at body temperature.
Of course, when police use this to try to locate a dead body and are led to the trunk of your car where you have this thing stored, it'll probably be just a teensy bit of hassle
Homeboy @ Feb 24th 2008 9:38AM
You post made me laugh out loud, my house mates must think I'm nuts.
P.S doesn't forget 1.8 oz of chicken blood.
Jonathan @ Feb 24th 2008 10:25AM
OK, sounds complicated.
I wonder how many people will just keep a corpse in their trunk to use the carpool lane.
Wwhat @ Feb 24th 2008 7:34PM
Yeah that's just great, people will drive around with gallons of water increasing pollution severely, causing a law against having water in your car.
Although obviously this technology will be used for much darker fascist things, and that's in the back of the mind of those that are involved with it.
A curse upon Loughborough University, may their people perish for helping fascist with new technology .
Oh and how is this magic suppose to work? radiation?
Garst @ Feb 25th 2008 2:06AM
Why not just drain a hobo of its blood? Then you're solving two problems at once. Or better yet, kill the hobo, take it to a taxidermist, and use it a la "Weekend at Berney's" style.
rndmnme @ Feb 24th 2008 9:14AM
What about the people who are fat enough to have 2x the blood and water levels of a fit person? Do they squeak by?
yoshi @ Feb 24th 2008 11:09AM
And what about the skinny little soccer mom with a newborn at her side? No carpool for you!
bi0hazard @ Feb 24th 2008 11:43AM
well im not so sure that those people will even be able to fit in a car. 18 wheeler-maybe, but a normal car...
martin @ Feb 24th 2008 9:28AM
what if vampires get hold of this :0
DjSnafu @ Feb 24th 2008 9:31AM
Indeed
Kurian @ Feb 24th 2008 9:31AM
humans or any other living thing, arent hard to find...
martin @ Feb 24th 2008 9:35AM
what about blind vampires.
Jonathan @ Feb 24th 2008 10:22AM
... or thirsty vampires. They need it twice as much.
Austin @ Feb 24th 2008 10:37AM
In terms of british literature, the realistic chances of vampires have been hurt substantially, as well as Sweeney Todd/Jack the Ripper scenarios. However, Orwell: Right on track!
Austin @ Feb 24th 2008 10:37AM
In terms of british literature, the realistic chances of vampires have been hurt substantially, as well as Sweeney Todd/Jack the Ripper scenarios. However, Orwell: Right on track!
TavisJohn @ Feb 24th 2008 11:33AM
Blind Vampires using a CAMERA... Yea.... THAT would work...
LOL!!!
Reader @ Feb 24th 2008 4:51PM
This entire thread is hilarious.
Flashpoint @ Feb 24th 2008 9:35AM
I'm in favor of an auto-cut off switch inside the car to keep drunks from driving. I just hope that it is done in a way that carries a 99.9% fail safe.
I'm sure alot of people here will disagree with me but the government should be responsible for mandating all cars have this technology by some date (say 2030).
Drunk Driving has ruined more likes than it should have been able to in America.
John @ Feb 24th 2008 10:09AM
Sorry, taking away people's privacy won't make your dead relative come back.
Flashpoint @ Feb 24th 2008 10:30AM
First of all, your comment shows that you are an ASSHOLE.
Second I am fortunate in that I've never lost a relative to drunk driving.
I just feel bad for people who have and believe the government can reduce and possibly stop this with the aid of technology.
MEAT! @ Feb 24th 2008 10:36AM
There are 301,000,000 people currently in the United States. Let's argue that a modest 25% of them own a car.
(301,000,000 * .25)
Let's assume that these people drive once to work, and once back in a day, and that's it.
(301,000,000 * .25) * 2
Now let's take your failure rate of 0.001 (99.9% success)
(301,000,000 * .25) * 2 * 0.001
That leaves 150,500 instances where a car refuses to turn on because it claims the sober driver is drunk.
For 150 instances a day (of the underestimate of 25% of pop. driving) it will take three or more tests to start the car, assuming the software doesn't lock you out for, say, twelve hours.
99.99999% would still leave 15 malfunctions in cars a day.
What if you pop the clutch and your car stalls in traffic? Should you have to convince your own car you're not drunk? What if you've had two drinks, got out of the bar, and your father falls to the ground suffering from a heart attack? The hospital isn't far away, your car is right there, yet you can't drive it and save his life because you had two beers.
telepheedian @ Feb 24th 2008 10:44AM
Better yet, should your car have to test you if you have already vowed to never consume alcohol?
facebookfake @ Feb 24th 2008 10:45AM
Listen. I completely agree, drunk driving sucks. But you aren't going to solve a problem by throwing technology and money at it. Perhaps proper education of children on the subject instead of scare tactics? And proper treatment for those who are alcoholics.
LiQuiD_FuSioN @ Feb 24th 2008 10:53AM
I'll say that nothing is 100% reliable.
How about the government introduce forcefield technology instead?
Stevo @ Feb 24th 2008 11:13AM
Hey BUDDY! Yeah you, over there! I'll give you 20 bucks to blow in this deal for me!
MEAT! @ Feb 24th 2008 11:25AM
@Stevo
Trust me, that may sound like a great idea now, but I'll be the one chuckling in the jury at your sexual harassment trial.
John @ Feb 24th 2008 12:58PM
Flashpoint,
No, they can't. You're wrong. With the aide of technology, we can also install mandatory breathalysers in on front doors in homes to prevent public drunkenness. We can have government-mandated robots perform cavity searches before you leave your house to make sure you aren't carrying drugs. Hell, let's have technology kill all embryos that might carry genes for disabilities? (Oh wait, that's already about to happen over in the UK).
Technology meant to invade people's lives "for the good of society" instead of genuinely aide people's lives is ridiculous. I wish people would back off and worry about their own lives.
okayokay @ Feb 24th 2008 10:32PM
I like the education instead of "intervention" argument-
why not just educate people not to steal cars instead of putting locks on them?
Suppose while walking down the street, one of your friend's has to go to the doctor- but you don't have time for an ambulance to arrive? Surely it would be okay to use a car to get the person to the doctor. In the same way it would be okay to put someone else's life in jeopardy so you can perform a favor?
okayokay @ Feb 24th 2008 10:32PM
sorry about the spelling- reading too many unedited postings has that effect.
okayokay @ Feb 24th 2008 10:33PM
sorry about the spelling- reading too many unedited posting has that effect.
Homeboy @ Feb 24th 2008 9:35AM
What if you're riding with Nicole Richie and Tara Reid. Together those two can't contain more liquid than a bottle of Mountain Dew.
Andrew @ Feb 24th 2008 11:34AM
Nicole Richie is pregnant, right? I imagine she's well bloated by now. And she should have enough water and blood for the two of them.
rndmnme @ Feb 24th 2008 5:12PM
Oh, I'm sure they are plenty full of liquid. But alchol and "other substances" don't count.
Liam @ Feb 24th 2008 9:46AM
If the camera was self-aware, I bet it would be thinking "There is only one puny meatbag in this car!" or something like that. Yeah.
PL9855 @ Feb 24th 2008 9:51AM
Um, this obviously could be used to prevent people from illegally crossing through the boarder of the southern US, if someone is hiding in a car. That seems like a better application to me than merely detecting HOV offenders. No?
Stevo @ Feb 24th 2008 11:08AM
My thought as well... forget the stupid car pool lane....
StrangeBum @ Feb 24th 2008 8:32PM
And living in a state like Arizona where that is such a constant struggle, I totally see your point. The only problem though, is that we have these sorts of technologies, yet the government tends to use them in ways that aren't nearly as beneficial as others could be.
I won't say don't use this on HOV offender by any means though, just that you're right and that they should adopt this to border patrol, but probably won't for years to come. If ever, seeing as how our elected political heroes, 'pres candidates', want to give all illegal aliens licenses and what-not.
Michael Payson @ Feb 24th 2008 10:11PM
Strangeburn:
The drivers license issue isn't quite as simple as it's made out to be. If an illegal alien doesn't have a license, they can't have insurance. Would you rethink the issue if you were rear-ended by an uninsured illegal? Granted, many illegals won't get insurance, but if even 10% do it will save people hundreds of thousands, probably even millions of dollars a year on car repair bills that they should not have to pay for.
There are also extremely strong national security arguments for giving drivers licenses illegal aliens. See http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2008/02/giving_drivers.html for details.
Wwhat @ Feb 25th 2008 11:32AM
Exactly, it's designed for fascist not for carpool checking.
Rohit Kapur @ Feb 24th 2008 10:03AM
I'm gonna comment with what I uttered when I read the topic of the article:
What the fuck??
austin @ Feb 24th 2008 10:04AM
one a them really big dogs would count as a child
Andrew Pollack @ Feb 24th 2008 10:20AM
This sounds to me like a case of spending a fortune to go after a small number of violators. Its the same thinking that leads us (as a society) to spend billions on DRM which raises the cost and complexity of purchased media content to the point where people are much more likely to work to circumvent it and copy.
A human trait (also found in other primates) is an extreme sensitivity to 'being cheated'. This is what causes us to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to stop 100 violators a day -- something which doesn't actually change traffic patterns.
A much more effective approach is simple to make the penalty for being caught very high. Call it what it is, "Fraud" or "Tax Evasion". Prosecute it as such with all the inherent penalties, and you only need to catch two or three in a year to have a much bigger impact.
itsnotabigtruck @ Feb 24th 2008 3:08PM
But this is exactly what the RIAA gets criticized for (probably rightly so).
eX @ Feb 26th 2008 10:09PM
Why not just fuck those carpool lanes altogether? I can't stand them, here everyone is jammed into two stinking lanes going 1mph and there are maybe a car or two in a carpool lane. If all 3 lanes were for everyone there ought to be less traffic. On the other hand, perhaps government should rather enforce house zoning better so we don't end up with stinking overpopulation and builders opting to pay the measly fine and build wherever anyway.
gerard van schip @ Feb 24th 2008 12:33PM
I'm 100% with Andrew on this...
Djangelic @ Feb 24th 2008 10:41AM
weird :)
Djangelic @ Feb 24th 2008 10:42AM
weird :)
Flashpoint @ Feb 24th 2008 10:54AM
I claim a rate of 99.9% because 100% is NEVER possible.
Keep in mind, Airbags have the same rate and you don't see Airbags exploding in people's faces unless the car is damaged.
As for EDUCATION - so much drinking goes on in campuses and around schools that education is irrelevant. Also keep in mind NOT EVERYONE gets an education in America. Take a look at college/HS dropout rates.
ssuk @ Feb 24th 2008 10:46AM
I like how Engadget, if there's ever a post about the UK, will include a picture of the queen or make a statement about how the UK is a police state and how 'big brother' watches us. It does get a bit boring and repetitive, guys...
Richy @ Feb 25th 2008 4:39AM
It doesn't stop it being true, though...
B'stard facists.