In 2016, the mobile game Pok茅mon Go sent hundreds of millions of players wandering the streets in search of virtual monsters. In the process it helped popularise augmented reality (AR) technology, which overlays computer-generated imagery on real-world environments.
Now Pok茅mon Go is set to take AR to a new level. A new feature within the game will encourage players to create and upload 3D scans of real-world locations.
The game鈥檚 developer Niantic also just acquired the AR maps start-up 6D.ai for an undisclosed sum. Chief executive Jon Hanke聽聽the companies鈥 ambitions: "Together, we鈥檙e building a dynamic, 3D map of the world so we can enable new kinds of planet-scale AR experiences."
And it鈥檚 not just Niantic. In February, Facebook聽, an AR start-up that was creating a 3D map of the entire world, and Microsoft鈥檚 Minecraft Earth AR mobile game touts the same kind of planet-scale AR play.
These scans, and this type of data collection, will likely affect all of us in the near future.
One reason for Niantic鈥檚 huge success has been how it uses digital games to collect data about the world.
Niantic was initially formed as聽聽in 2001 with backing from the CIA鈥檚 tech venture capital firm, In-Q-Tel. The company developed mapping technologies used by the US military in the early 2000s.
Keyhole Inc was acquired by Google in 2004, and was instrumental the development of Google Maps. In 2010, Keyhole was rebranded as Niantic and focused on games. It stayed part of Google until 2015, when it became an independent company again.
In 2012 Niantic launched a game called Ingress, which saw players photograph and upload millions of locations of interest that became 鈥減ortals鈥 within the game.
Screenshots of the Ingress Portal Scan Feature, via Niantic. Credit: Brian/Niantic.
These portals became the underlying infrastructure that powers Pok茅mon Go and other games, but just as valuable was the data collected about how players moved around the world while playing.
Niantic鈥檚 latest game, Harry Potter: Wizards Unite, collects each player鈥檚 location聽, which is often enough to recognise individual behaviour patterns and detect intimate details of their life.
Tech companies and investors think this kind of data is immensely valuable. In December 2019, Niantic raised funds at a valuation of聽.
The 3D scans Pok茅mon Go players are collecting are intended to create new possibilities in the game, but they will also give Niantic鈥檚 platform for AR developers聽.
Having a system that can recognise 3D environments around the world makes it easier for developers to make shared AR experiences and environments that 鈥渆xist鈥 even when the user logs off.
Apple, Facebook, Microsoft and Google are all developing AR products that are likely to depend on a technique called聽聽to continuously scan 鈥 and collect data about 鈥 the users鈥檚 physical environment.
The next iPhone is聽聽to have a powerful LiDAR scanner to create more detailed 3D scans, and better support Apple鈥檚 AR ecosystem.
Facebook acquired the virtual reality (VR) company Oculus in 2014 for USD$2.3 billion, and Mark Zuckerberg frames success with VR as being key to the company鈥檚 AR ambitions.
This is well exemplified in LiveMaps, a technology demonstrated by Facebook鈥檚 Andrew Bosworth at the 2016 Oculus Connect developer conference.
Facebook鈥檚 LiveMaps tech demo depicts the types of experiences that could be possible with ubiquitous AR, but also hints at the amount of data technology companies will need to hold about our homes and lives to function.
Any system like LiveMaps will demand constant collection of finely detailed data about the users鈥 home and everything in it:
AR glasses will scan the surroundings to create a live dynamic index amplified by crowd-sourced data, allowing the maps to recognise when things have changed and update automatically.
What will pervasive augmented reality mean? Beyond relatively benign possibilities such as more targeted advertisements, we need to think critically about the consequences of technologies like these before they are firmly entrenched.
As the Australian futurist Mark Pesce has聽, 鈥渂y virtue of the way they operate, augmented reality systems must simultaneously act as very sophisticated surveillance systems.鈥
Ever-growing unregulated collection of spatial data across the globe has the potential to create powerful systems of surveillance, control, and influence. We have examined this potential in detail in a recent report on the聽.
Like technologies such as facial recognition, granular spatial data might be used in order to dominate, oppress and discipline populations, and particularly the most marginalised in society. As awareness grows of the problems with facial recognition, companies such as IBM and Amazon have recently begun to聽聽themselves from the technology.
We are also already seeing the rapid growth of an AR industry which doesn鈥檛 (at least solely) sell to the commercial market, instead selling to workplaces, law enforcement, security agencies and the military.
AR smart helmets in use in Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic. These devices can scan crowds of people and trigger an alarm, despite the limited evidence supporting temperature screening as a preventative measure. The same devices have automatic facial recognition modes and other surveillance capabilities. Credit: LaPresse/Sipa USA.
As the聽, the dangerous impact of emerging technologies is often only realised once they have done some damage.
If what we share on social media can be used to influence elections, what might the data about the contents of our home be used for? Or everything we encounter in a given day?
Let鈥檚 take these technologies for what they really are: not just for entertainment, but apparatuses for extracting data and accumulating power and profit.
This piece was originally published by .