The Mercury News

Is the ground listening to everything you do?

- By Yasemin Saplakoglu Ysaplakogl­u@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The streets and walkways on the Stanford campus are empty. Your footsteps echo as the wind hums. But you’re feeling a bit tense, as if you’re not alone.

You’re right. Buried underneath the ground are fiber optic cables listening to you walk past.

It’s part of a project called the Big Glass Microphone, aimed at demonstrat­ing just what a threemile stretch of undergroun­d cables can detect. And now that researcher­s know that fiber optics can be used to sense human movement, they’re wondering whether it points to a future of surveillan­ce without the need for fancy cameras and other technology.

As unnerving as it sounds, the

technology could eventually have beneficial realworld applicatio­ns — such as quickly identifyin­g a car whose driver is endangerin­g lives by going 50 mph over the speed limit, or revealing the source of sounds that may be messing up science experiment­s on campus.

“The whole world is getting to the point where it’s beginning to be wired up as a whole sensor network. It’s picking up all kinds of informatio­n incidental­ly,” said Jon Christense­n, an adjunct assistant professor at UCLA and partner and strategic adviser at Stamen Design.

Stamen, a San Franciscob­ased visualizat­ion and data communicat­ion company, is collaborat­ing on the project with Stanford’s geophysics department; OptaSense, an internatio­nal acoustic-sensing company; and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

The project has created an online animation of the vibrations picked up by the fiber optic cable — which has been continuous­ly recording noises since last September.

Campus noise

Fiber optic cables are found all over the world, from the bottoms of oceans to beneath our sidewalks. They’re thin strands of glass that take a piece of informatio­n, such as a person’s voice, and temporaril­y turn it into light to send it to its destinatio­n.

The cables allow you to instantane­ously send photos halfway around the world, but they can also tell you how heavy the traffic is on the main drag in your hometown.

And it turns out if you know what to listen to, the fiber optic cables can reveal a whole lot more.

Usually, researcher­s ignore any incidental extra signals that the cables pick up — those that don’t have to do with the cables’ main purpose — and filter them out as “noise.”

But vibrations can cause these hair-thin strands to stretch. By measuring the amount they stretch, researcher­s can discern if a person, car or a motorcycle is rolling past it.

The fiber optic loop under Stanford’s campus was originally installed last August for seismic research, but the Stanford team, with the help of OptaSense, decided to turn the noise into signals.

Eileen Martin is a Stanford Ph.D. student in computatio­nal and mathematic­al engineerin­g working on analyzing seismic research from the campus cables. She uses them to detect earth-rumbling events as small as explosions from quarry blasts in Cupertino to the large earthquake in Oklahoma last September. Martin doesn’t filter out the noise, but uses it to figure out how noisy the Stanford campus is in order to determine how stable the ground is.

Human ears can’t hear most of this noise.

“Think a couple of octaves below the lowest point on a piano, and that’s where the kind of frequency range is where all these noises happen,” she said.

Privacy invasion

The Stamen team says the project raises all kinds of questions about privacy.

“Infrastruc­ture is listening to us … but how much do we want our infrastruc­ture to be monitoring us at the same time that we’re monitoring it?” Christense­n asked.

Eric Rodenbeck, the founder and CEO of Stamen, thinks fiber optic cables will eventually be able to tell the difference between different models of cars and how many people are riding in them.

According to Rodenbeck, each kind of car has a unique signature depending on its make and its load weight, which registers as mechanical vibrations of the engine as the car goes by. This in turn vibrates the fiber optic cables in varying frequencie­s.

“When we start talking about smart cities and digital infrastruc­ture … we are pointing to a future where there’s not just sensors everywhere, but the whole world and all of the infrastruc­ture in it can be used as a sensor,” Rodenbeck said. “What does privacy even mean when every place you go your individual gait is trackable or the specific weight of your car is trackable?”

The Stamen team thinks even buildings can be used as sensors in the same way to pick up slight vibrations.

“A building and the wires and other infrastruc­ture in it could vibrate if a person is walking by,” Christense­n said, “and you could pick it up if you’re listening closely enough.”

No doubt, Big Brother would be thrilled. But some people might argue that the potential benefits outweigh the privacy concerns.

“We can learn very useful things,” Christense­n said. “Is a pipeline leaking? Is a building sealed to be energy efficient? Is the flow of traffic optimal on this road?”

And it could eliminate having to install layers of security cameras and other expensive technology.

“Basically this sensing ability just falls off the truck,” Christense­n said. “You kind of get it for free once you have a fiber optic cable and a box at the end of it.”

Chimed in Rodenbeck: “We have a worldwide sensing network — and you have that without satellites, and you have that without cameras. What other kinds of things can be used as listening devices?”

 ?? JEAN MARTIN ?? Stanford student Eileen Martin monitors sound from fiber optic cables beneath the ground.
JEAN MARTIN Stanford student Eileen Martin monitors sound from fiber optic cables beneath the ground.
 ?? GARY REYES — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Fiber optic cables in the ground under Lomita Mall at Stanford University monitor sounds of man and machine.
GARY REYES — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Fiber optic cables in the ground under Lomita Mall at Stanford University monitor sounds of man and machine.

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