As time passes, my deep-seated desire to not be perceived only grows. Unfortunately, becoming truly imperceptible both online and off clashes with a number of my ambitions—I can't keep writing if there's no audience, right? Well, going off the grid and becoming a cryptid in the woods looks like it's fully off the cards for me now, thanks to recent Wi-findings from researchers in Italy.
A team out of La Sapienza University of Rome has developed ',' a system that can track individuals with an alarming level of precision by monitoring how their physical body interacts with Wi-Fi signals (via ). Based on how one's body interferes with this ubiquitous network of signals, the researchers can effectively 'fingerprint' folks and track them with up to 95.5% accuracy. Is anyone else feeling kind of claustrophobic within their flesh prison today, or is that just me?
What is broadly known as Wi-Fi Sensing has already been leveraged to a variety of much less anxiety-inspiring ends, . Over the years, a number of research teams have also used Wi-Fi Sensing as a non-invasive alternative to monitoring patient respiration—you can . But this time it's difficult to overlook the surveillance implications.
Thankfully, this technology has yet to be used in such a real-world scenario. Even though the research team didn't need masses of specialised hardware to pull off their Wi-Fi Sensing project—apparently recording their data using only "two TP-Link N750 routers"—it would be premature to get too paranoid just yet.
So, 'Who-Fi' is hardly a cyberpunk Eye of Sauron staring into your very soul just yet, instead sitting mostly within the realm of 'ain't it neat'—for the time being, at least.

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