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Science Technology

'Smart Sewer' Project Will Reveal a City's Microbiome 37

the_newsbeagle writes: Public health officials want to turn streams of sewage into streams of data. A new project in Cambridge, Mass. will equip sewer tunnels with robotic samplers that can routinely collect sewage from 10 different locations. MIT scientists will then analyze the sewage content for early signs of a viral outbreak or a food-borne bacterial illness, and may be able to draw conclusions about specific health trends throughout the city. This Cambridge effort is a proof of concept; the MIT researchers plan to deploy a larger system in Kuwait, where officials are particularly interested in studying obesity and the effectiveness of public health interventions.
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'Smart Sewer' Project Will Reveal a City's Microbiome

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  • by Anonymous Coward
  • Privacy implications (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Friday April 10, 2015 @05:20PM (#49450069) Homepage Journal

    Lest we forget our current state of affairs wrt privacy, note:

    If the police can access the data, they can use it to determine lots of things about you. For example, they can probably detect if there's a meth lab upstream from the current location, and use this as a guide for the placement of more sensors. Eventually they'll narrow it down to a single household, and know where the meth lab is.

    They could do this with drug use as well. They could find evidence of, say, cocaine use in the stream and use this to place more sensors, then narrow it down to an individual household. Then see if the household member is in a critical job, such as ambulance driver or surgeon.

    ...or any job, really. They could just alert your employer to the fact that "someone in your household" uses drugs.

    They could determine the ethnic profile of individual homes from the food eaten.

    They could determine the health of individuals living in individual homes in several ways - detecting diabetes, or obesity, or diet for example. Insurance companies would probably want this information.

    And legally, their response would probably be "you have no right to privacy for anything that you flush into the public sewers", or "just as with driving or flying, you can choose not to do it" or some such.

    I can see a lot of benefit from doing this (sewer monitoring in India is being used to show that polio has been eradicated), but we really need to get a handle on the privacy implications from the start, before the big abuses begin.

    This will be like video cameras: expensive at first, then ubiquitous. Look to see a sensor at the outlet from each home in a couple of decades.

    • I would imagine that, by following the source of a 'signal' upstream it should be possible for a police force to use this to home in on every drug user in a city.

      In the USA I wouldn't imagine that sampling the sewage would require any kind of warrant?

      And once they can say that the sewage line from *this* house contains traces of *these* drugs its probable cause, DEA raid etc.

    • by kipsate ( 314423 )
      Data about an individuals health must be private. Automatically analyzing sewer samples is fine as long as the data is aggregated and no individual can be singled out.

      Bit worried about this combined with DNA fingerprinting. It seems a trivial next step to analyse a sewer sample, and after establishing drug use, get a DNA fingerprint and run it against a database. Do we want to allow such intrusive surveillance? Or is there a line to be drawn, even in case of drug use?
    • This short infomercial [youtube.com] for the service should address all your concerns!
  • Here's Rob Knight [ted.com] talking about the highlights of recent microbiome research. Amazing stuff.

  • So, let's be honest here ... this is a project by MIT to tell Yalies once and for all that, yes, your shit does stink.

    You know it is. ;-)

Children begin by loving their parents. After a time they judge them. Rarely, if ever, do they forgive them. - Oscar Wilde

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