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Before the late 19th century, a person's identity was terrifyingly fluid. Criminals could simply move to a new town, change their name, and completely erase their past. The state had almost no reliable mechanism to permanently tie a human being to their own history.Everything changed with the obsessive research of Francis Galton and the colonial administrators in British India. By categorizing the microscopic ridges on human fingertips, they invented a biological barcode that was immutable and absolutely unique. What began as a tool to prevent pension fraud quickly evolved into the foundation of modern criminology and the ultimate weapon of the surveillance state. The human body itself had become a permanent, inescapable record.This historical investigation traces the dark, fascinating origins of biometrics. It exposes the intersection of Victorian science, colonial control, and early statistics, showing how the desire to categorize humanity forever altered the relationship between the citizen and the law.Discover the true origins of your most personal data. Understand how the simple act of leaving a mark on a page built the invisible walls of our modern tracking society.
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