http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=domesticNews&storyid=2007-01-26T195830Z_01_N25259138_RTRUKOC_0_US-WORK-SCANNERS.xml&src=rss&rpc=22

N.Y. scanners spark union cries of "geoslavery"
By Michelle Nichols 

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Every morning Dennis Colson, a surveyor at New York City's 
Department of Design and Construction, begins his work day by placing his hand 
on a scanner to log his time and attendance at the office. 

The use of hand geometry and other biometric data, like facial and iris 
recognition, is not new -- the University of Georgia pioneered the use of hand 
geometry when it installed scanners in its student dining hall in 1974. 

But the planned roll-out of hand geometry scanners in all New York City 
government agencies has sparked union cries of "geoslavery" and assertions that 
technology developed for security will be used to track, label and control 
workforces. 

"It's frustrating, it's kind of an insult," Colson, 53, told Reuters. "They are 
talking about going to voice and retina scanners and that's an invasion of 
privacy in that they can track you wherever you go." 

Jon Forster, of the Civil Service Technical Guild, which represents Department 
of Design and Construction workers, said the biometric systems gave the city a 
license to obtain personal, uniquely identifiable data to track workers. 

"It's really a matter of this kind of technology having far outstripped any 
legislation or even case law in the United States in terms of what are the 
restrictions," Forster told Reuters. 

"On the one hand I think people might all agree that if you put a GPS system in 
ambulances then that's a good thing. On the other hand you have an employer in 
Ohio who has demanded that two of his employees have chips implanted in their 
bodies."   

"If these are the extremes, the question is where does the line get drawn?" he 
said. 

"The unions' arguments keep changing, but the tracking workers throughout the 
day is not true. It's just for clicking in and out," said Stu Loeser, spokesman 
for New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, adding that there were no plans to 
install voice recognition or iris scanners. 

IS HAND GEOMETRY THE REAL PROBLEM? 

Biometrics expert Jim Wayman, who consults for the U.S., British and Australia 
governments, said mobile phones and credit cards were the "No. 1 enemies" for 
workers worried about geoslavery, not biometrics. 

"There may be large forces at work in western society wishing to enslave the 
workforce. I want to acknowledge that fear. But hand geometry is not part of 
this," Wayman, who has studied biometrics for more than two decades, told 
Reuters. 

He said monitoring computer and phone usage were the "tools by which an 
employer would seek to enslave the workforce -- it would not be done through 
biometrics." 

In 2004, U.S. employers reportedly spent $9 billion on monitoring devices for 
the workplace, while a 2005 survey by American Management Association and The 
ePolicy Institute found 76 percent of companies monitor workers Web site use. 

The survey of 526 U.S. companies also showed 36 percent of employers track 
computer content, keystrokes and time spent at the keyboard, while half store 
and review employees' computer files and 55 percent retain and review e-mail 
messages. 

Only 5 percent used GPS in phones and 8 percent used GPS in company vehicles, 
while fingerprint scanning only accounted for 5 percent, facial recognition 2 
percent and iris scans 0.5 percent. 

"Most people in the industry are surprised that biometrics devices have not 
become more widespread already," Wayman said. 

"There is a 40 year history of implementation of biometric devices, but use of 
these devices has never become widely popular and one of the reasons is they 
are thoroughly expensive to use and it's not clear the cost savings in their 
use." 

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