

The alleged liveness of "live"
legal visuality, biometric liveness testing and the metaphysics of presence
pp. 649-669
in: Anne Wagner, Richard K. Sherwin (eds), Law, culture and visual studies, Berlin, Springer, 2014Abstract
In the context of contemporary societies preoccupied with questions of surveillance and identity verification, biometric systems are being increasingly deployed across a wide range of institutions and organisations in order to provide security of access. In this chapter, I examine the techniques that might be deployed by fraudsters in order to trick biometric systems into giving them illegitimate access to data and/or controlled areas. In order to counter the tactics used by fraudsters to "fool" biometric systems, biometric scientists and technologists are in-building within the technologies a number of tests designed to detect fraudsters. One of the key fraud detection methods being deployed by biometric systems is so-called liveness testing; liveness testing is being used to determine whether the person being screened by the system is actually present (and "alive") rather than a simulacrum reproducing a stolen identity. In the course of this chapter, I proceed to situate the procedures of "liveness testing" within a Derridean critique of the metaphysics of presence in order to disclose the unacknowledged philosophemes that inform legal, scientific and technological understandings of the body, the legal subject and identity. I conclude this essay by focusing on the development of a new range of biometric technologies that are attempting to preclude digital spoofing by focusing on the seemingly non-replicable depths of the inside of the body. Regardless of this descent into the depths of the body, I argue that, once again, these transductions of the "raw" organic material of the soma cannot escape either the logic of iterability or its consequent spoofable effects.