WhoFi tracks people by reading Wi-Fi disturbances, offering camera-free surveillance with worrying accuracy

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  • WhoFi uses Wi‑Fi signal distortions to fingerprint individuals without visual data
  • Deep neural network maps signal changes to identify people with near‑perfect accuracy
  • Academic research opens new privacy debates around biometric tracking via Wi‑Fi signals

Researchers at La Sapienza University in Rome have created WhoFi, a system which claims to be able to identify individuals by analyzing Wi‑Fi signals.

The system tracks people by interpreting how their presence disrupts Wi‑Fi patterns, offering a potential alternative to conventional biometric methods.

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