Title :
Social costs of surveillance and the case of biometrics
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Sociological Studies, Univ. of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
Abstract :
Discussions of the developments in biometric measures have long recognised not only the increased technological capabilities they offer but also the particular impacts they pose for privacy. However, not unlike the case with other surveillance measures, the relatively narrow scope of this concept of privacy in relation to biometrics fails to take account of other important social impacts emanating from the significant developments in surveillance technologies over recent decades. Biometric measures - with their inherent links to the person´s body and unique, physical make-up - raise even more salient concerns with respect to the social implications of contemporary surveillance capabilities both for the individual and particular social groups. There is a body of academic analysis that does endeavour to address some of the sociological, ethical and political issues raised by the increased scale and scope of application of biometric technologies. However, this pales into comparative insignificance in relation to the far weightier but much narrower discussion of data protection and privacy issues from a legal perspective. This relative paucity of analysis of the specific social costs - and their particular features-emanating from the use of biometric measures belies their potential to arouse particular sensitivities amongst both citizens and civil society groups. This paper draws upon some of the available sociological literature as well as upon findings from an evaluation of the effectiveness of certain biometric technologies conducted as part of the EU FP7 IRISS project. The aim is to highlight those significant social costs that are associated with the wider and more intensive use of biometric measures within the contemporary surveillance context in which the citizen finds themselves.
Keywords :
biometrics (access control); data privacy; ethical aspects; surveillance; EU FP7 IRISS project; academic analysis; biometric measures; biometric technology; biometrics; contemporary surveillance capability; contemporary surveillance context; data privacy issue; data protection; ethical issue; political issue; social costs; social group; social impact; sociological issue; sociological literature; surveillance measure; surveillance technology; technological capability; DNA; Face; Face recognition; Fingerprint recognition; Iris recognition; Surveillance;
Conference_Titel :
Information and Communication Technology, Electronics and Microelectronics (MIPRO), 2014 37th International Convention on
Conference_Location :
Opatija
Print_ISBN :
978-953-233-081-6
DOI :
10.1109/MIPRO.2014.6859764