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The Backlash Kit: Anti-Surveillance Tools for Protestors


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The Backlash Kit: Anti-Surveillance Tools for Protestors

 

the-backlash-kit-anti-surveillance-tools

 

Only a proof-of-concept for now, not available for sale

 

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Two New York-based designers have launched a collection of devices that can prove quite useful for street protesters, as a way to balance the odds against high-tech government and police forces.

 

Their invention, called the Backlash Kit, was launched in October, and comes with a series of wearable gadgets that can be used to fight against some of the high-tech arsenal deployed by police forces during protests.

 

The kit consists of a bandana, a bracelet, a portable router, a portable hard drive, a communications jammer, a stencil and spray paint. But these are not your ordinary day-to-day objects.

 

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The bandana is painted with a computer-generated pattern inspired by the traditional kaffiyeh, which depending on the way it's folded, can transmit different messages.

 

A vibrating panic button that you can wear on your arm

 

The bracelet is equipped with a vibrator, which can be activated to signal warnings to nearby rioters. It can be turned on to let everyone know when a protest starts becoming violent, and will automatically start vibrating for all protesters that get near a danger zone. It's basically a panic button worn on your hand.

 

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The portable router can be worn on a chain or carried inside pockets, and allows protesters to connect to offline mesh networks (which eventually find a way to connecting online) when local public Internet connections are shut down by authorities.

 

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The portable hard drive can be used as a personal black box, and used to store and hide photos or videos from phones, in case authorities, start seizing smartphones.

 

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A custom communications jammer to defeat stingrays

 

The jammer can be used in situations where local authorities use stingrays or similar devices to collect data about protestors using their smartphones. The jammer can be activated and then used to mask any incoming signals, but allow attackers to make calls from their phones.

 

the-backlash-kit-anti-surveillance-tools

 

The stencil and spray paint are low-tech tools that can be used to leave small marks on buildings and fences. Depending on each protest, these signs can be interpreted as free WiFi spots, dangerous locations, or safe heavens where people can rest.

 

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For now, the Backlash Kit is only a proof-of-concept, and the two designers made it as part of their Masters thesis at the Interactive Telecommunications Program at New York University. The idea is brilliant, and it won't probably take long before a copycat launches a Kickstarter project.

 

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Want one!!

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