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Turning a Blind Eye to Big Brother

SiliconRedox writes: "An article in the NYTimes (user reg.) details what many of us who have worked with video or electronics have known for quite awhile: Shine a laser beam (or infrared, but the article doesn't get into that) at a video camera, and you can effectively blind certain viewpoints of the camera. The article follows one man trying to cope with the surveillence society by removing his own image from everyday video footage using this technique. The most interesting part? What kind of culpability does the individual or institution have in utilizing this kind of technology?"

229 of 610 comments (clear)

  1. I've known about this for a long time. by josh+crawley · · Score: 2, Funny

    We had high school busses with cameras. Well, a lot of us would take ruby lazers and shine it at the camera. For some reason, it could never record right.

  2. Privacy by DBordello · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't it just as much your right to be not seen as it is to seen? Wearing black such that people can not see you is just the same as blinding a camera.

    1. Re:Privacy by Kwikymart · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes, if people want your reflected photons they damn well better be prepared to accept ALL of them, artificial or not. Speaking of that, you could theoretically transmit the terms of a license over the laser beam to REMOVE these people's rights to your image. Of course, you cannot do this with actual people, but such is life.

      --

      Buying a Dell computer is equivalent to dropping the soap in a prison shower.
    2. Re:Privacy by GigsVT · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's illegal in most states to conceal your face in public, i.e. by wearing a mask, unless your work dictates it, or it is a "recognized holiday", whatever that means.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    3. Re:Privacy by kbielefe · · Score: 4, Funny

      What if you are a thief for a living?

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    4. Re:Privacy by SeanWithoutPants · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Eh, I would be suprised if those laws that you speak of would hold up to any scrutiny. Simply consider a woman who wears a burka as part of her religious beliefs.

      It's understandable (imo) to require one's face to be seen for an ID card, but not for every day public life.

    5. Re:Privacy by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 2

      I'll admit right up front that I don't have first hand knowledge of the laws you mention, but I really have to raise the bullshit flag on your assertion. I'd love to hear any details you might be able to provide.

      --


      Evil is the money of root.
    6. Re:Privacy by limekiller4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      DBordello writes:
      "Isn't it just as much your right to be not seen as it is to seen?"

      Oh what basis do you have this right? And am I now obligated to avert my eyes? No, I think that if you don't want to be seen, find a way to not absorb part of the spectrum and reflect the rest back.

      I think you've got it backward. You don't have a right to not be seen -- that's placing an emcumbrance upon me, and a "right" that you have yet to provide a basis for, I might add. You have a right to not be seen if you can figure out how. That places no encumbrance upon me to provide you this so-called "right."

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    7. Re:Privacy by GigsVT · · Score: 4, Informative

      18.2-422. Prohibition of wearing of masks in certain places; exceptions.

      It shall be unlawful for any person over sixteen years of age while wearing any mask, hood or other device whereby a substantial portion of the face is hidden or covered so as to conceal the identity of the wearer, to be or appear in any public place, or upon any private property in this Commonwealth without first having obtained from the owner or tenant thereof consent to do so in writing. However, the provisions of this section shall not apply to persons (i) wearing traditional holiday costumes; (ii) engaged in professions, trades, employment or other activities and wearing protective masks which are deemed necessary for the physical safety of the wearer or other persons; (iii) engaged in any bona fide theatrical production or masquerade ball; or (iv) wearing a mask, hood or other device for bona fide medical reasons upon the advice of a licensed physician or osteopath and carrying on his person an affidavit from the physician or osteopath specifying the medical necessity for wearing the device and the date on which the wearing of the device will no longer be necessary and providing a brief description of the device. The violation of any provisions of this section shall constitute a Class 6 felony.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    8. Re:Privacy by GigsVT · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Seams to be a terrible law to me.

      That's nothing... some other Virginia laws of note:

      18.2-361. Crimes against nature.

      A. If any person carnally knows in any manner any brute animal, or carnally knows any male or female person by the anus or by or with the mouth, or voluntarily submits to such carnal knowledge, he or she shall be guilty of a Class 6 felony, except as provided in subsection B.

      This means that oral or anal sex between consenting adults is illegal. About 25 states have similar laws.

      18.2-322. Expectorating in public places.

      No person shall spit, expectorate, or deposit any sputum, saliva, mucus, or any form of saliva or sputum upon the floor, stairways, or upon any part of any public building or place where the public assemble, or upon the floor of any part of any public conveyance, or upon any sidewalk abutting on any public street, alley or lane of any town or city.

      Any person violating any provision of this section shall be guilty of a Class 4 misdemeanor.

      18.2-344. Fornication.

      Any person, not being married, who voluntarily shall have sexual intercourse with any other person, shall be guilty of fornication, punishable as a Class 4 misdemeanor.

      Christian bias:
      5.1-136. Free passes or reduced rates.

      No air carrier subject to the provisions of this chapter shall, directly or indirectly, issue or give any free ticket, free pass or free transportation for passengers, but nothing in this section shall apply (1) to the carriage, storage or handling of property free or at reduced rates, when such rates have been authorized or prescribed by the Commission for the United States, state or municipal governments, or for charitable purposes or to or from fairs and expositions for exhibition thereat, or (2) to the free carriage of homeless and destitute persons and the necessary agents employed in such transportation, or (3) to mileage, excursion or commutation passenger tickets.

      Nor shall anything in this section be construed to prohibit any air carrier from giving reduced rates or free passage to ministers of religion, or regular traveling secretaries of the Young Men's Christian Association or Young Women's Christian Association, whose duties require regular travel in supervising and directing Young Men's Christian or Young Women's Christian Association work, secretaries of duly organized religious work, or to indigent persons, or to inmates of the Confederate homes or State homes for disabled soldiers and sailors, or to disabled soldiers and sailors, including those about to enter, and those returning home after discharge; nor from giving free carriage to its own officers, employees, and members of their families, representatives of the press and members of the Department of State Police or to any other person or persons to whom the giving of such free carriage is not otherwise prohibited by the law; nor to prevent the principal officers of any air carrier from exchanging passes or tickets with other air carriers of any air, motor vehicle, steamship, or electric railway companies for their officers, employees and members of their families.

      18.2-314. Failing to secure medical attention for injured child.

      Any parent or other person having custody of a minor child which child shows evidence of need for medical attention as the result of physical injury inflicted by an act of any member of the household, whether the injury was intentional or unintentional, who knowingly fails or refuses to secure prompt and adequate medical attention, or who conspires to prevent the securing of such attention, for such minor child, shall be guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor; provided, however, that any parent or other person having custody of a minor child that is being furnished Christian Science treatment by a duly accredited Christian Science practitioner shall not, for that reason alone, be considered in violation of this section.

      So, in Virginia, it's OK to let your kids die from preventable infections, so long as you have some Christian voodoo doctor pray over them.

      There are plenty of other fucked up laws that need to be repealed. This is just a taste.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    9. Re:Privacy by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 2

      Thanks for providing the details as asked...I apologize for my, ahem, strong language. I'm flabbergasted that this law, as written, makes it a felony to simply wear a mask. I wonder how many other states have laws like this?

      I do note, however, that the law provides for the wearing of traditional holiday costumes, but does not specify that they may only be worn during certain holidays. Therefor it seems to me that a common halloween mask may be worn at any time, or that a bank robber may dress as Santa Claus without that particular offense being added to his rap sheet.

      --


      Evil is the money of root.
    10. Re:Privacy by Hercynium · · Score: 3, Funny

      Indeed, this underscores the importance of not being seen!

      --
      I'm done with sigs. Sigs are lame.
    11. Re:Privacy by lordkuri · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But at least it's not a capital felony anymore ...

      erm.... don't you mean yet?

    12. Re:Privacy by Catbeller · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      Actually, due to a fucked-up 1930's Supreme Court decision, the Christian Scientists obtained immunity from child abuse, at least the medical kind. Yes, they, and similar religions, can let their kids die of hideous and sometimes preventable sickness, and they are scott-free.

      Remember this as you pass by CS reading rooms. Screams of children dying, thinking they aren't praying hard enough for God to save them.

      Ah, America. Mark Twain wanted to kick Mary Baker Eddy's ass, and he was right. But now he is called a "religious bigot" because he pointed out that she was a con. And children will pay for her con, forever.

    13. Re:Privacy by Catbeller · · Score: 2

      All states, I think, make it a crime to wear a mask, or to conceal one's identity. Even on Halloween, cops will stop you and ask you to unmask. I can understand why.

      The only way around it is to form a religion that requires you to hide your identity. Takers, anyone? This dodge worked for many others; mayhap we should use that legal blindness to our advantage.

    14. Re:Privacy by Kibo · · Score: 2

      If you are a good thief it's not illegal. And if it is illegal due to some public outcry you'll only get a slap on the wrist and you'll get to keep your ill gotten money. Tax free naturally.

      --
      --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
    15. Re:Privacy by surprise_audit · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Doesn't the Bill of Rights say something about a reasonable expectation of privacy in your own home, whih is why law enforcement officers are supposed to get search warrants before demanding entry?? There's your basis for the right to be not seen.

      Of course, once you give up that right by stepping out of your house, all bets are off. Any random passerby can observe anything you do or say...

      And to folks that have a problem with cameras watching everything you do, I have just this to offer - let them. Let the Gubmint put up cameras. The more the merrier, I say. Why? Because eventually the system will implode under the sheer volume of data.

      Until, or unless, image recognition gets to be very, very good and very, very fast, there's no way that a computerised system is going to track any one individual. This means that for every person "they" want to track, "they" pretty much have to assign several heads to watch the monitors. The salary bill alone will cripple the system. Then there's the cost of the office space, the equipment, power, A/C, etc.

      Pretty soon the only people unemployed would be drunks and drug-users that can't get their eyes uncrossed enough to watch a monitor.

      Ah, what the heck, go ahead and flame me. It's just an opinion, and I have the right to give it to you. I just don't have the right to make you understand it, or even to make you listen.

    16. Re:Privacy by limekiller4 · · Score: 2

      jokerghost writes:
      "In a word: bullshit. If I take a shower in a hotel, or I decide to use the toilet, you'd better damn well afford me the privacy and dignity I deserve as a human being. Let me ask you this: where do you get the "right" to monitor anything and everything, just because you can?"

      This is a non sequiter. The issue is whether you have the right to not be photographed in a public place.

      The right to privacy is provided by our government as a basic one. However, this extends only to places that one could reasonably expect to have it in the first place. For example, your home. It has recenly been asked if aeriel surveilance is legal -- does a personal have a reasonable expectation that they can be observed in their backyard via satellite?

      You are trying to equate being photographed in public with being photographed using the toilet in your bathroom. Bringing up the issue of a 5 year-old showering is a rather pathetic attempt to equate my position with that a pedophile, which is an indication of how shaky your argument really is (you can always spot a bad argument when the phrase "for the children" is introduced). These are not equal examples and trying to blur them togoether makes the question harder to answer, not easier.

      Are you making the argument that you have an expectation of privacy in a public park?

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    17. Re:Privacy by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      Eh, I would be suprised if those laws that you speak of would hold up to any scrutiny. Simply consider a woman who wears a burka as part of her religious beliefs

      You often see on the front doors of bank branches these days instructions to remove motorcycle helmets before entering, so that everyone's face can be captured on CCTV, but mysteriously burkas are not included. I can't think of any reasonable explanation for this disparity.

    18. Re:Privacy by Reziac · · Score: 2

      I'd like to see this fly in northern tier states, especially along the hiline (wonder if anyone else here remembers what that refers to :) where the sustained January air temp is typically -65F at night and -45F during the day, with a wind chill that freezes exposed flesh in 30 seconds.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    19. Re:Privacy by Reziac · · Score: 2

      I don't see anything here which covers 1) religious beliefs (someone above mentioned women wearing the burka) or 2) to avoid freezing your face off in winter (assuming the state involved has significant winter).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    20. Re:Privacy by WNight · · Score: 2

      Considering religion is bunk, it's not a tough choice.

      But, I'm libertarian enough to respect your wishes to die over some silly beliefs.

      I'm not libertarian enough to allow you to take your child with you. They're not of age yet and having a parent make these choices is worse than any child abuse.

      If I ever saw a CS refusing medical treatment for their children I'd make sure they required a lot of treatment for themselves. Until everyone has the idea that this is abuse/murder these dogs will continue in their dangerously stupid practices.

    21. Re:Privacy by Tjp($)pjT · · Score: 2

      Hope they don't also have motorcycle helmet laws ...

      --
      - Tjp

      I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!

    22. Re:Privacy by aminorex · · Score: 2

      And if the child is a fetus? Does the parent then
      have the right to make the choice whether to apply
      a life-saving (or life-discarding) medical
      treatment, in your view?

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    23. Re:Privacy by WNight · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Does your church group print up pamphlets with "Tough Questions for Athiests" on them?

      Obviously there aren't black and white issues. A parent not wanting to trust ritalin for their child based on a hurried diagnosis is different than one refusing a blood transfusion for a child who lost a lot of blood from a deep cut.

      Just the same, abortion is an issue with no good hard rules. Even very pro-abortion people would dislike the idea of 9th month abortions and few reasonable anti-abortionists really hold to the view that every sperm is sacred, or that the instant a sperm and egg touch, that they are morally equivalent to a child.

      If you've studied any biology it's hard to get worked up about first trimester abortions. They're probably reasonable later, but except for hidden health complications, there are few valid reasons for waiting this long so limiting abortions to the first trimester is a reasonable compromise.

  3. awww shucks by edrugtrader · · Score: 4, Funny

    so the x10 camera i put up in my bathroom can be twarted by anyone with a laser??? what a jip

    --
    MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
    1. Re:awww shucks by joyoflinux · · Score: 2

      It's funny how, in the ads, they say you can use it "for security," but have a really hot woman in the background. Some security :)

    2. Re:awww shucks by garcia · · Score: 2

      why would anyone want to see your bathroom? Only one in the bathroom of "the girl next door" really matters ;-)

  4. Don't you think... by sajiimori · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A big bright spot would stand out a bit, wouldn't you think? And since there aren't that many people who regularly try to blind cameras, this guy may just be making himself stick out like a sore thumb!

    1. Re:Don't you think... by billbaggins · · Score: 3, Informative
      And since there aren't that many people who regularly try to blind cameras, this guy may just be making himself stick out like a sore thumb!
      Which is why he publicizes it! Now everyone who reads the article (which number is increased by the fact it's been published on /.) could theoretically make one of these things and start using it.

      ObMSFT-Jab: ...or maybe he just thinks security through obscurity is a good thing.

      --
      "The best argument against democracy is a five minute chat with the average voter."
      --Winston Churchill
    2. Re:Don't you think... by Glytch · · Score: 2

      What about cameras in public streets? If only one person with a window office plugged in a little laser and kept it shining 24/7 at a camera mounted on a streetlight, it could work.

    3. Re:Don't you think... by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      A big bright spot would stand out a bit, wouldn't you think? And since there aren't that many people who regularly try to blind cameras, this guy may just be making himself stick out like a sore thumb!

      All the camera can see is that someone is blinding it: not who.

  5. Video Cameras by SuperDuG · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I do believe that it is well within someone's right to not have their picture taken if they don't wish it to be. Or at least have a warning on the entrance of an establishment that you are being videotaped. I think the law that says you don't have to inform someone that you're videotaping them, but that you do for audio is bogus. The law needs to be changed, it's an invasion of privacy no matter how you want to look at it, if someone doesn't want to be videotaped, then they shouldn't be videotaped, there is no grey area. You should be informed before proceeding that you are under video survailence.

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    1. Re:Video Cameras by kfg · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is perfectly legal to stick a microphone out your window and record everything that happens to make sound. In NYS it is perfectly legal to record a private conversation so long as *one* of the actual participants knows it is happening.

      I also happens to be legal to record the image of anything, by still or moving pictures, that happens in a public setting.

      This is why the cops don't just arrest everyone with a camera.

      There is an assumption, like it or not, that when you appear in public you are appearing. . . ummmmm, in public.

      This is true even for celebraties who have trademarked their image.

      If you don't want to be seen don't stand up from behind the bush.

      KFG

    2. Re:Video Cameras by limekiller4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      SuperDuG writes:
      "I do believe that it is well within someone's right to not have their picture taken if they don't wish it to be. Or at least have a warning on the entrance of an establishment that you are being videotaped. I think the law that says you don't have to inform someone that you're videotaping them, but that you do for audio is bogus. The law needs to be changed, it's an invasion of privacy no matter how you want to look at it, if someone doesn't want to be videotaped, then they shouldn't be videotaped, there is no grey area. You should be informed before proceeding that you are under video survailence."

      I'm an amateur photographer. I have tons of photographs of people who I never asked to be in my pictures. Generally, they're ancilary to my subject, but occasionally not.

      For example, I shoot subway pictures in Boston. You'd like to see this made illegal unless I get everyone'ss permission, presumably in writing?

      I've taken pictures of the Rocky Horror Picture Show being performed. Are you suggesting I need to get the signatures of the audience first?

      I've taken pictures of street intersections. You feel I should be compelled to ask each pedestrian before I do it?

      Are these absurd examples? I don't imagine you'll want to argue that only subjects of the photo need to provide their consent, but if you do, how in-focus are they allowed to be? How close to the center of the picture can they be before I am in violation of your ethic?

      Besides, what gives you the idea that you are somehow entitled to the exclusive rights of the photons that have bounced off your body?!

      I think it's your obligation to stop scattering light!

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    3. Re:Video Cameras by saskboy · · Score: 2

      What about situations in public where you are trying to take a picture of your family in front of the Statue of Liberty, and some bozo walks infront of them? What are we going to do? Make a law that it illegal to spoil people's pictures, or a law that gets you in trouble for accidentally taking the bozo's picture?

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    4. Re:Video Cameras by phliar · · Score: 2
      I do believe that it is well within someone's right to not have their picture taken if they don't wish it to be.
      Well, that's fine, but in the USA and in other countries you do not have that right. Images of you cannot be used for commercial gain without a model release; but if you're in a public place, you can be photographed by anyone. (The laws are a little dim on whether the police can take photographs of people without probable cause.)

      Perhaps it is an invasion of privacy; but only if you have an "expectation of privacy." Think of it this way: do I, as a private citizen, have the right to take a picture of a street? How about a city skyline? Do I have to track each recognisable person down and ask their permission? (Of course most photographers will put their camera away if you ask them to not take your picture. Not a choice you get with non-government rent-a-cops, or if you're on private property like a shopping mall.)

      --
      Unlimited growth == Cancer.
    5. Re:Video Cameras by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I also happens to be legal to record the image of anything, by still or moving pictures, that happens in a public setting.

      I read about a recent case where people put "panty cams" on staircases and escalators to catch whatever shows up under skirts. These people were sued but the case went in their favor because it was in a public place where people had no expectation of privacy.

      The problem with that is that I'm _certain_ that the people wearing skirts, particularly women, _aren't_ expecting to have their delicates photographed in such a manner in a public place.

    6. Re:Video Cameras by possible · · Score: 2

      Nobody is asking about the legality of filming people in public. What's at issue here is the legality of a person choosing NOT to have their image taken.

    7. Re:Video Cameras by SeanWithoutPants · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Aye. The justices (who were women) said that it was basically reprehensible and disgusting, but given the wording of the current law, legal.

      Not suprisingly lawmakers have said they're going to alter the voyeurism law so this type of thing does become illegal.

      ABC News article

    8. Re:Video Cameras by theLOUDroom · · Score: 2

      Not in all situations.
      I'm pretty damn sure it would be illegal to hang a parabolic microphone out your window pointed into someone else's window and record what goes on in their house.
      It's probably a pretty safe bet that putting a camera in a public shower would be illegal too.
      Besides the whole point of this article is that, while it is legal to put a carmera in public, it may also be legal to foil that camera.
      By going out in public, I accept that others may see and record what I'm doing, but that doesn't mean I have to make it easy for them.
      If you don't want to be seen don't stand up from behind the bush.
      Please. Spend a week without going out in public and tell me how it works out. If I don't want to be seen, I get to do whatever I want (within the bounds of the law) to not be seen. If I don't want you recoding my voice, I can carry around a white noise generator or something. If you don't like that, too bad.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    9. Re:Video Cameras by Tiroth · · Score: 2

      Actually there was a case that received some media exposure a little while back where a woman discovered a camera installed in her shower. It turned out that the only criminal offense they could dig up was theft of electricity! (Now, it is possible there is some civil resource, but the taping was not a crime)

      In most (all?) states in the U.S. it is perfectly legal to stand on your property and use your eyes, telescopes, etc, to peer into your neighbor's homes.

    10. Re:Video Cameras by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2

      For example, I shoot subway pictures in Boston. You'd like to see this made illegal unless I
      get everyone'ss permission, presumably in writing?


      Well, by using the Boston subway system you're agreeing to abide by the MBTA's terms, which may or may not allow photographs to be taken without permission.

      A quick glance at http://www.mbta.com didn't turn up anything about their policy on this, but I know for the fact that on the PATH trains here in NY/NY, the Port Authority's Rules and Regulations explicitly forbid any photograpy within the system without prior consent of the PA.

  6. Gotta know there's a camera there by ShawnDoc · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The problem is you have to know there is a camera there in the first place. If you don't know its there, you can't shine a laser at it.

    And lets not forget the liability of shining a laser in someone's eye. Even though he mentions he's using low powered laser pointers, those still have the potential of harming someone. And in our sue happy society, we don't even have to wait until it actually does harm someone. All it will take is a greedy lawyer to start up a class action lawsuit.

  7. Who would actually do this? by Viscount9 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Dont get me wrong, this is a very interesting read, but...Perhaps, I am not paranoid enough, but I could not bring myself to busy myself with using littel laser points on every single camera that is nearby.

    I ride the MUNI in San Francisco, which is the public buses, and well, they have about 3-4 cameras on the new buses and perhaps even microphones (i am not sure).

    I cant imagine any normal people running around with laser pointers in side the bus, pointing that thing at the cameras. Okay, there are lots of crazy people on the SF Buses, but no one sane would do it. Doenst one have better things to do? Or worse things to worry about?

    1. Re:Who would actually do this? by sulli · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I ride the buses here as well and am strongly in favor of the cameras, as a means of fighting pickpockets, harassment, graffiti, and other crime. Anyone who wants to blind these cameras should consider the consequences.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
  8. Re:Mirror of article by Timmeh · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Good job moderators [/sarcas], but if you really want to get in, just remeber the NYT Random Login Generator. It won't work directly from the website anymore because the Times has blocked all requests from his site, but just download and run it from your machine, click the button, refresh once and you're in. Works like a charm.

  9. Phobia??? by joyoflinux · · Score: 3, Funny

    I bet he has scopophobia (the fear of being seen) :)

  10. He has ethical problems w/doing this? by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While Mr. Naimark acknowledged that he had some ethical discomfort about his project because his information could be useful to terrorists, he decided to go ahead.

    "My interest and motivation is to provide the creative community with some stimulating and provoking stuff," he writes. "These are stimulating and provoking times."


    I have ethical problems w/these devices being put into place to watch me. They have absolutely NO place in public areas. I do NOT like the fact that people are there watching what I do.

    VMS sites in PA have bothered my for some time. They are going to "only watch traffic patterns". Oh fucking bullshit. They are going to say that until they are in place and in use for an undetermined amount of time. Once the devices are there they are going to use them to track speeders and other lawless individuals.

    We do NOT need machines tracking us or doing the job of the police. If the cop isn't paying attention, or isn't there when I blow by their hiding spot in the middle of the road at 105, tough.

    There's NO reason to have feelings against radar jamming (the cops cheat to find out how fast you are going, why shouldn't we cheat and not let them know how fast we are going?), blocking out video taping in public places of people, etc.

    That's my worthless .02

    1. Re:He has ethical problems w/doing this? by Have+Blue · · Score: 2

      Have it your way, but when you get run over by some guy with a few outstanding tickets don't come crying to me.

    2. Re:He has ethical problems w/doing this? by ergo98 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I have ethical problems w/these devices being put into place to watch me. They have absolutely NO place in public areas. I do NOT like the fact that people are there watching what I do.

      How do you feel about other human beings being in the area, all ready to watch you intently the moment you do something outside of the norm? That is quite simply the reality of being in a public space. Do you scream for everyone to turn their gaze the other way lest they capture some of the light beams that have reflected off you?

      Like it or not, cameras are extremely effective criminal deterrence, and when that fails they're extremely effective tools in finding the culprit: When the sniper in Washington is caught, it'll likely be the result of some random electronic camera that caught the culprit speeding away. Personally I find the cost of public cameras (that my image, which is readily visible to everyone there, is captured) well worth the cost to public safety. It's here where we cue that pathetic misquote about temporary safety, et. all.

    3. Re:He has ethical problems w/doing this? by wadetemp · · Score: 2

      Very well said.

      Do you scream for everyone to turn their gaze the other way lest they capture some of the light beams that have reflected off you?

      No, but now that you've pointed it out I'm sure someone will figure out a way they can sue for being mentally recorded.

    4. Re:He has ethical problems w/doing this? by ion_ash · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Don't get me wrong. I don't agree with the idea of videotaping the public en masse. I don't like phone-tapping, e-mail eavesdropping or surveillance in general.

      However, I take issue with:

      • We do NOT need machines [slashdot.org] tracking us or doing the job of the police. If the cop isn't paying attention, or isn't there when I blow by their hiding spot in the middle of the road at 105, tough.
      • There's NO reason to have feelings against radar jamming (the cops cheat to find out how fast you are going, why shouldn't we cheat and not let them know how fast we are going?), blocking out video taping in public places of people, etc.

      Traffic monitoring is one example of surveillance I would vote for tomorrow, if it came up on a ballot initiative. Traffic fatalities happen when people are reckless, when you "just didn't see" the child crossing the road, or the deer in the dark; or you "didn't have time to swerve" out of the way of a drunk driver, or you lose control in a curve when you hit black ice you don't expect.

      Not to mention that traffic signalling systems are designed to work within traffic law. When people cheat, traffic systems break, traffic backs-up, more people cheat, the traffic gets worse (see a pattern here?)

      If installing traffic surveillance systems would help enable the 5-0 to stop the sniper attacks on the east coast or child abductors or bank robbers, or any of the above reasons--it's in society's best-interest. Enforcing the law isn't cheating; cheating is robbing the taxpayers of the services for which we spend so very much in taxes each year. Yes, prevention is a service we pay for.

      Don't complain to me about people watching over your shoulder, just make sure the public can watch over THEIR SHOULDERS too, and we can all be happy.

      Besides, God can always see what you're doing, right? ;)

    5. Re:He has ethical problems w/doing this? by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We do NOT need machines tracking us or doing the job of the police. If the cop isn't paying attention, or isn't there when I blow by their hiding spot in the middle of the road at 105, tough.

      You seem to regard law enforcement as some sort of game, and you think that using technology is 'cheating.' What if they scrap the technology and simply post a cop with a stopwatch at every mile marker and overpass? Will you feel less violated then? Will the game be fair enough for you? What if all the cameras referred to in this thread were replaced by cops with binoculars?

      If you're in public, expect to be seen. If you're driving 105 mph, expect to get caught, whatever the means.

      --


      Evil is the money of root.
    6. Re:He has ethical problems w/doing this? by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

      No, he responded to a journalists troll about enabling terrorists with a thoughtful answer that didn't make good copy, so it was redacted and replaced with blurb. At a wild guess.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    7. Re:He has ethical problems w/doing this? by The+G · · Score: 2

      If installing traffic surveillance systems would help enable the 5-0 to stop the ... child abductors ... it's in society's best-interest.

      Better get ready for them to install the cameras inside your house, then: The vast majority of child abductions are committed by members of the child's immediate family.
      --G

    8. Re:He has ethical problems w/doing this? by mi · · Score: 2
      Like it or not, cameras are extremely effective criminal deterrence

      Have any references to the statistics?

      when that fails they're extremely effective tools in finding the culprit

      Every time I see the cameras mentioned in relation to a crime, it says, the recording was too grainy to be useful (like not even the license plate number is recognizable). May be, those are the only references, that make it to print, but do you have any others? The recording is done on the same tapes over and over, so, of course, it will be of very low quality, unless, with luck, a fresh tape was added just recently.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  11. Great.... by Xenographic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My guess? Someone will do this while they rob the 7-11, the technique will become "terrorist" (or whatever) & nobody will care [enough] about the Big Brother potential of the cameras.

  12. Infrared? Ummm... probably not. by clark625 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    To blind a CCD or other imaging device, infrared beams won't cut it. You need high enough energy photons that guarantee virtually every photon entering will produce an electron-hole pair in each type of detector. That means at the very least, inside the visible range. Preferably just beyond into the ultraviolet. If I swamp out the reds, a smart technician could just look at the other colors to determine what's going on.


    So, you really want ultraviolet. Just barely into that range will work. That would ensure all the detectors were swamped and thus nothing could be done to get an image out. Now, someone please let me know when ultraviolet lasers and high-powered LEDs are avaiable on the market. Well, maybe I'll let you all know when it's done since that's something I'm doing for my PhD work ;)

    --
    Long, cute, or funny Sigs are just another form of over compensation, used by geeks, nerdz, etc.
  13. Re:Culpability by Sparr0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    he isnt destroying anything. the blindness is temporary. the only 'camera' i know of that could be permanently blinded by a normal laser pointer is the CMOS inside my flatbed scanner.

  14. Don't Give Saddam (or the RIAA) Ideas! by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hell, just think what damage Saddam could do to orbiting US spy satellites if he had a half-decent laser and some idea of where to aim it.

    Hey, maybe in light (pun) of this guy's antics, the RIAA will now lobby congress to outlaw all laser diodes over a certain wattage (in the name of "homeland security" you understand). This would make CD writers illegal. Look Ma, no piracy problems!

    Oh, dear, there are too many good ideas in this thread that the fringe-lunatics could grasp onto.

    1. Re:Don't Give Saddam (or the RIAA) Ideas! by csnydermvpsoft · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey, maybe in light (pun) of this guy's antics, the RIAA will now lobby congress to outlaw all laser diodes over a certain wattage (in the name of "homeland security" you understand). This would make CD writers illegal. Look Ma, no piracy problems!

      Of course, that would also make CD *players* illegal, so at least for the time being, that might pose a slight problem.

      Of course, if they're selling CD's, they don't care if anyone is actually playing them...

    2. Re:Don't Give Saddam (or the RIAA) Ideas! by GuyMannDude · · Score: 2

      Hell, just think what damage Saddam could do to orbiting US spy satellites if he had a half-decent laser and some idea of where to aim it.

      I know you're joking but, seriously, it's not very hard to figure out the orbits of most of the satellites. I think the real problem would be accounting for atmospheric distortion and getting the timing correct. You'd have to calculate the amount of refraction that the beam is going to undergo. And remember that these satellites are flying around in orbit pretty damn fast. You have to get pretty much a precise hit into the optics of a fast-moving target (even if you do know its trajectory) to do some damage. I think it'd be one shot in a million.

      GMD

    3. Re:Don't Give Saddam (or the RIAA) Ideas! by gvonk · · Score: 2

      And remember that these satellites are flying around in orbit pretty damn fast. You have to get pretty much a precise hit into the optics of a fast-moving

      Er, uh... wait. If it's in geosynchronous orbit, you don't need to move the laser at all, right? Just point it and leave it... /me looks out the window to see if the neighbor's directv dish is spinning around wildly...

      --


      El Karma: excelente(principalmente la suma de moderación hecha a los comentarios de los usuarios)
    4. Re:Don't Give Saddam (or the RIAA) Ideas! by namespan · · Score: 5, Funny

      I think it'd be one shot in a million.


      Oh c'mon, Biggs, it's just like hunting womp rats back home.

      --
      Libertarianism is rich wolves and poor sheep playing gambler's ruin for dinner.
    5. Re:Don't Give Saddam (or the RIAA) Ideas! by Eric+Smith · · Score: 2

      Spy satellites are generally not in geosynchronous orbits, for obvious reasons.

    6. Re:Don't Give Saddam (or the RIAA) Ideas! by Tycho · · Score: 2

      I believe that spy satellites are generally in polar orbits. That way one satellite can cover the entire world and you just send up more spy satellites since you want to cover all of the world at one time. Besides the space for geosynchronous orbits is limited and is better utilized for things that need to be pointed at the same spot all the time like weather satellites and most kinds of communications satellites.

      --
      Impersonating Tycho from Penny Arcade since before there was a PA.
    7. Re:Don't Give Saddam (or the RIAA) Ideas! by Overzeetop · · Score: 2

      You can do this, and it's not terribly hard. Laser Satellite Ranging has been around for many years. see http://ranier.hq.nasa.gov/Sensors_page/Laser/SLR.h tml for info. Typical stations used Nd:YAG lasers with 200mJ energy pulses with pulse times in the tens-of-picoseconds range (IIRC - it's been a long time). We could track both low and mid earth orbit satellites from a few degrees above the horizon on a good pass. Of course, the satellites had retroreflectors which gave us a feedback loop to keep the laser on track.

      Realize that at several hundred kilometers altitude, the 4" diameter laser beam would cover a fairly large area (>100m) due to the diffraction limit of the optics (10**-4 radians, give or take), so the areal power density at the satellite was quite low.

      I doubt that any modern army has NOT considered such a method. Of course, any attempt at active photo-jamming would instantly send up a red flag for that location.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  15. Re:Mirror of article by redink1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Argh, that text is nearly unreadable (no line spaces and such)... try the Google Partner link to bypass the login.

  16. Re:Culpability by island_earth · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's not destruction of anybody's property if it's temporary, which is what the article suggests.

    In fact, if he copyrights his own image, he's actually enforcing his rights, and any attempt to make the camera capture his image will then be a DMCA violation...

  17. Re:Infrared? Ummm... probably not. by RatBastard · · Score: 5, Informative

    Point a digital camera at one of those IR cordless headphone transmitters. What do you see? Why, really bright spots where those almost invisible to the human eye LEDs are! And those LEDs are really low power. High power IR LEDs pointed at a camera might not knock it out for good, but it would glare-blind it.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  18. Re:Well, you know.... by blibbleblobble · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "I'd hope that Big Brother wouldnt spy on us outside our legal rights"

    The article mentions hidden video cameras in the bathroom [toilet] of hotels. I have actually seen these in UK service-stations (2mm hole in smoke detectors), and everyone who hears about them is disgusted at the concept.

    Larger-scale, towns all over the country are rushing to install cameras. Our high-street has a particularly prominent mast being installed, which looks far too spookily like the panopticon in its placement. They don't solve crimes, they don't prevent crimes, they don't make the streets safer.

    This has been proven. Video cameras covered the alleged kidnapping of a girl in our town last year, and they were no use whatever with the police investigation. We have video-footage of several thefts, and car-vandalism, again, these have not been used to solve any crimes.

    Local councellors are pleading with government for money to install these things without even a clue as to their lack of effectiveness at any sort of real crime.

    Italian-job style jammers may be nice playing with these cameras, ultraviolet ones like the US Army is using to permanently blind people would be better, but what can people actually do if the local council (and every other) says you will live in a surveilled society and put up with it?

  19. Sinister hot looking lady by Syncdata · · Score: 2, Funny

    I don't know about you, but that really hot woman in the background makes me nervous. She wasn't there before. I need to be constantly appraised of her actions, for my own sense of well-being.

    --
    "Inattention makes clowns of us all" -Bean
  20. they are public places by ageitgey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While I'm glad someone is out their pushing back at all the video taping aimed at us, I don't see why this is such a huge problem. I agree everyone has a right to privacy. But when you enter a public place, you give up some of your rights of privacy. No one is putting cameras in your house or invading your privacy.

    How is it invading anything to watch you where you are already watched anyway (by humans)?

    --
    Uninnovate - Only the finest in engineering.
    1. Re:they are public places by Phanatic1a · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This isn't just watching; it's recording.

      Yes, people can see you when you're walking about your daily business, but mutant superpowers aside, they're not watching you intently and making a file of everywhere you visit and everything you do.

      If every day when you left the house, I started following you with a digital video camera and stopped only when you returned home, I'd just bet that you'd feel I was invading your privacy.

      Unless you're some sort of exhibitionist freak, of course.

    2. Re:they are public places by io333 · · Score: 2

      But when you enter a public place, you give up some of your rights of privacy.

      I agree. But when they are watching me and I do not know it, or I cannot watch them, I am being violated.

      No one here yet has managed to put to words just exactly how and why it is different than just being watched by someone else on the street, but we all know that it is different.

    3. Re:they are public places by reflector · · Score: 2

      I agree. But when they are watching me and I do not know it, or I cannot watch them, I am being violated.

      no, you aren't. "being watched" consists of collecting photons that are reflected off of you. once those photons leave you, they are no longer yours, and you have no say over them or what someone else does with them.


      No one here yet has managed to put to words just exactly how and why it is different than just being watched by someone else on the street, but we all know that it is different.


      "we all know"? don't presume to speak for others, and claim that your view is universal, it isn't! i could care less if a camera or a person is watching me.

    4. Re:they are public places by Kaiwen · · Score: 2
      "we all know"? don't presume to speak for others, and claim that your view is universal, it isn't!

      Nah, he's right. We all know it's different. For one thing, installing a camera to watch me implies that I need to be watched -- i.e., that I'm untrustworthy. This is entirely different from the casual observer whose view just happen to pass over me as I perambulate down the boulevard.

      Second, he's also right that the camera isn't simply watching, it's recording, in a way qualitatively different from the human brain casually recording and then discarding information, your sophistry notwithstanding.

      Lee Kaiwen
      Taiwan, ROC

    5. Re:they are public places by blakestah · · Score: 2

      Guess what? The brain (lossily and selectively) records what the eyes see. Hence, there is no way to watch without recording, even if not using any sort of technological means (i.e., a camera) to do so.


      This reply basically assumes that if one person watches me from a short distance away (eyesight distance), it presents the same privacy compromise as if everyone in the world watches me from a long distance away using a video linkup. Further, it is also the same as if the video feed were recorded, and could be played back, and computer analyzed for content.

      It is not. Privacy is not black-and-white, either you are in your own home or you are in the public eye. My personal issue with this comes with cameras at beaches where I live. They can see someone hiding a key under their car (even if no person is in a direct line of sight). They can see your six year old daughter playing unsupervised because she slipped away. These present REAL risks, and increased exposure can have dramatic effects on the outcome.

      My feeling is that you have to draw the line somewhere. The detraction from REAL privacy loss must be weighed against the community good from having the camera. In many cases, this balance weighs far too heavily on the privacy loss side.

    6. Re:they are public places by Kaiwen · · Score: 3, Insightful
      and how about a policeman who is standing and scrutinizing passers-by, trying to determine if they're up to something illegal? hence your argument is refuted.

      As I recall the policeman's motto is "To protect and to serve." A camera does neither; it merely surveys and records. It doesn't direct traffic, it doesn't provide assistance, it doesn't help old ladies across the street, it doesn't even eat donuts. And even if a policeman does stand and scrutinize, he doesn't record. And don't try the bit about his brain is recording. His brain cannot simultaneously record the activities of hundreds of passersby, or recall them perfectly say ten years from now. He cannot remember clothes worn, items carried, or routes taken for even a small handful of pedestrians. His job is to look for suspicious activity and then act on it, discarding all other information. A camera merely records the activities of all persons, making no judgements and providing no assistance.

      Your refutation is refuted.

      your thick-headedness nonwithstanding

      Just FYI, ad hominems rarely win points in debates. They're generally considered bad form.

      there could easily be a detective at the same place

      I suppose for argument's sake we could suppose a policeman on every corner doing nothing all day but sketching and taking notes, but in fact I've never seen this. Have you? And if I did go out one day to find police to stand around sketching the activities of random citizens, I'd sure as hell be demanding to know a) who authorized my tax dollars to be so wasted, and b) what business it is of the police department to be so recording my activities.

      the only real difference is that the camera is vastly more efficient.

      As mentioned above, there is a qualitative difference: the cop observes in order to discover and act upon suspicious activity. The camera merely observes.

      Lee Kaiwen
      Taiwan, ROC

    7. Re:they are public places by Reziac · · Score: 2

      What about if the police later sit down and watch all that recorded footage? How does that differ from a cop with a sketchpad standing on every corner?

      If it were your Tivo, you'd call it timeshifting.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    8. Re:they are public places by reflector · · Score: 2

      1) a policeman can record and sometimes does.
      2) your ad hominems are ok but mine aren't?
      3) good luck telling the government you don't like how your tax dollars are being spent...they'll likely laugh at you or more likely ignore you. and actually, that's an argument for cameras, they're more efficient and spend less of your tax $.
      4) in my second example i specifically said a detective. there's no reason he can't merely observe as well if he's hired to do that.

    9. Re:they are public places by Kaiwen · · Score: 2
      1) a policeman can record and sometimes does.

      Yes, I've seen this -- after an accident, interviewing witnesses, for example. I've never seen a cop standing around recording for no good reason.

      2) your ad hominems are ok but mine aren't?

      I used no ad hominems. Try looking up "ad hominem" and then look up "sophistry"; it's a description of your arguments, not of you.

      good luck telling the government you don't like how your tax dollars are being spent...

      They're called city council meetings; I've attended more than a few in the past, and yes, the city (at least where I lived; maybe you need a new place of residence) does listen to citizen input. State and federal government may be another story, but they're not the ones putting in cameras.

      cameras [are] more efficient and spend less of your tax $.

      It's what they're spending my tax dolloars on that's the issue, not how many of them they're spending.

      in my second example i specifically said a detective. there's no reason he can't merely observe as well if he's hired to do that.

      Detectives are even worse, as they cost more. But please see my previous comment. Have you ever seen a detective used in this fashion? I haven't. And this makes your argument speculative at best.

      Lee Kaiwen
      Taiwan, ROC

    10. Re:they are public places by Phanatic1a · · Score: 2

      The brain (lossily and selectively) records what the eyes see.

      In other words, the brain doesn't do at all what a video camera pointed at a given area does, making a wealth of cameras blanketing an area quantitatively different from a bunch of people walking through that area intent on their daily tasks. That's probably part of the reason why eyewitness testimony about what happened in, say, a car accident isn't anywhere near so accurate as a videotape of the same incident.

      Thanks for catching my entire point.

      I'd feel you were stalking me

      There are laws against such behavior, of course. What if, instead of following you around, I just arranged to have a bunch of video cameras placed in your path. Wouldn't that still be stalking?

      Why should a corporation have a power that it's illegal for me to yield?

    11. Re:they are public places by blakestah · · Score: 2

      Last time I checked, everyone in the world did not have a video linkup to traffic and security cameras.

      Many cameras (including the ones I refer to) are on live full-time internet feed.

      Why would anyone hide a key under their car? Who is monitoring the cameras -- cops or civilians? If it's a cop monitoring the camera, what can (s)he do with that information that can't be done with a slimjim? How can you be sure that no one is in line of sight?

      I live at the beach. People put their keys someplace when they go in the water, or they take the keys in the water. The cameras are on full-time internet feed. Someone can sit across town, watch a 'key-hider', and go grab the car. People in general do not see or know about the cameras.

      Now, you could argue that making public information more public isn't really a change in your privacy (in fact, that pretty much sums up all your arguments), but on that point we have a fundamental disagreement. I think I can make you change your mind by placing a full-time internet feed camera focussed on every window in your house. Hey - the cameras are only seeing things that could be seen in public anyway, right?

      There are some laws that govern such situations. A continuous video feed in your house would be ruled harassment, I believe. A store was forced to take down a long-range microphone that allowed them to listen to conversations of its customers. There are precedents, already. The real issue is what constitutes invading privacy in a public place, and what does not. For now there is almost no consideration of the privacy of people, and any visage/sound that is made "in public" is considered public domain, more or less.

      I find that very very wrong. And continuous internet broadcasting via web-cams of public areas is the area I think must be considered carefully for the positives the community gains from having such a camera (beach cameras only benefit people who do not live there - and invade the privacy of those who do live there), against the privacy invasions they bring with them.

  21. OK, until it gets common... by MadCow42 · · Score: 2

    The minute that this becomes "commonplace", surveillence cameras will suddenly come equipped with 633-635 and 650nm filters (then 532nm for green, etc). Sure these are a little expensive, but it's not difficult to do.

    Lasers are easy to block this way... by definition they only put out one frequency of light. With a good enough filter you could filter out that wavelength and never really notice the difference to the final image (except for scientific purposes of course).

    MadCow.

    --
    I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
    1. Re:OK, until it gets common... by norton_I · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is really not that easy to put in line filters at 635, 650, 670 (need that one, too), and 532 without really losing a high fraction of the desired signal. And that impairs the ability of the cameras to work in low light, which is a big deal for survalence. While a given laser has a very narrow linewidth, cheaply manufactured laser pointers have wild variations in the actual laser frequency, and cooling or heating the diode can shift that even more. Bare diodes are available relatively cheaply at probably 20 different wavelengths between 600 and 800nm.

      If someone seriously wants to block out all handheld laser pointers, they are going to have to throw out everything over 600nm, as well as 532 in the green. That is hard to do with high enough extinction that the laser doesn't overwhelm the CCD while maintainting high sensitivity.

  22. The slashdot big brother effect... by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 2

    Wow! This guy is now suffering from Big Brother with the Slashdot Effect?

    Slashdot Effect, because his website is already down, and Big Brother, because the website isn't even
    linked to on the ./ article!

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    1. Re:The slashdot big brother effect... by djmurdoch · · Score: 2

      His web site is back up. The paper is here.

  23. fucking whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'll bet you love nyt articles because you can whore karma with that link.

    Am I wrong?

  24. Link for those who doesn't have a reg. at NYTimes by Juiblex · · Score: 2, Informative
  25. Re:Mirror of article by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
    Sorry, but it doesn't work downloaded anymore either. At least it doesn't work off of my server.

    It just worked for me. You need to change the ZIP code, as the one in the file gets blocked. (I use 09012, which is one of the APOs @ Ramstein AB, Germany...haven't gotten mail through there since 1988, but since everything else is generated randomly...)

    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  26. Re:Infrared? Ummm... probably not. by bughunter · · Score: 5, Informative
    Unfortunately for your hypothesis, CCDs are very insensitive to the UV. For common chips used in mass-produced cameras, the polysilicon or aluminum "wires" that connect the pixels are in front of the photosensitive area, and the absorption depth of UV is very shallow, so the UV photons almost never get to the photosensitive area of the CCD. Also, for anything less than soft x-rays, a photon in a CCD produces either one or zero electrons, and for the visible region there is little correlation between photon energy and the probability of producing an electron, except deep in the blue, at the long wavelength cutoff of the quantum efficiency curve.

    Silicon is basically transparent to light of wavelengths longer than about 1000nm, so only very near-IR will work. The LEDs and photodiodes that let you surf from your LaZBoy with a remote operate at about 800nm, and a CCD is sensitive enough at this wavelength to be affected by an 800nm laser -- but this is invisible so you aren't going to find laserpointers in this "color." (Experiment -- shine your remote at your handicam... see anything? Cool, eh?)

    Anyway, many surveillance cameras are black and white, with no color filtering or separation, so really, any color laser is useful as long as the CCD is sensitive to it. The quantum efficiency of most CCDs peaks around 400-600nm, but it is still quite high at the most common laser diode wavelength of 650nm, so there isn't really a problem. At 300nm and lower, CCDs are virtually blind without expensive processing called "backside thinning," and you won't see backside-thinned devices on common surveillance cameras because they are very expensive.

    Yes, color surveillance cameras are more and more common. For a color camera, a strong enough laser beam will still overwhelm a color CCD that uses a mosaic filter (as opposed to a three-chip camera with beamsplitters). This works because the princple that the author uses is that of "blooming." Basically, if your bright source creates too many photoelectrons, the excess flows over the walls of the pixels (which are really just potential barriers, not physical walls) into neighboring pixels. Make even a one-pixel source bright enough and you can flood a whole region of the array. Since the readout electronics can't tell which pixel any given electron originated in, it just looks like one big, bright extended source on the image.

    This phenomenon is often encountered by anyone who works with focal plane arrays or uses data collected by them... ever seen an astronomical photograph with long bright lines emanating from either side of the brightest stars on the image? That's blooming, and it looks like bars instead of a smudge because astronomers pay extra for CCDs with "antiblooming" sinks to the substrate -- think of them as drains between pixel columns. But the chipmakers can't put drains between rows because that is the direction in which the pixels are shifted to be read out. In addressable pixel devices, like CMOS active pixel sensors, 2D antiblooming is easier, but it cuts down on the available area for collecting light, so it often isn't used on inexpensive CMOS APS chips found in surveillance applications.

    Three-chip color cameras are only used for professional video production -- they're just not cost effective for surveillance or consumer applications when color mosaic CCDs are so much cheaper. There may be some high-end consumer cameras with three-CCD technology but they aren't common at all.

    Of course, all bets are off for military applications -- only the military and their suppliers know for sure what's in their surveillance gear, and I suspect that they have already contended with the problem of laser-blinding CCDs used in night vision.

    --
    I can see the fnords!
  27. Re:Infrared? Ummm... probably not. by limekiller4 · · Score: 2

    clark625 writes:
    "If I swamp out the reds, a smart technician could just look at the other colors to determine what's going on."

    You probably should have bothered to read his site. He quite specifically covers this scenario and how military jammers switch between colors to make filtering useless.

    --
    My .02,
    Limekiller
  28. Somewhat OT: Cameras don't scare bullies by GuyMannDude · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I ride the buses here as well and am strongly in favor of the cameras, as a means of fighting pickpockets, harassment, graffiti, and other crime.

    An example where these cameras are NOT having any measureable deterent value can be found here where bullies on school buses still physically beat other students knowing full well they are being videotaped. I'm not sure there is a huge difference between child-aged bullies and adult petty criminals...

    GMD

  29. A Most Effective Solution by flyneye · · Score: 2, Insightful

    call it low tech but wouldnt a pellet gun make a much more reliable blind spot in public surveillance? well when ya think about it our right to bear arms was intended to control tyrrany by the gov't.. course a spraycan of flat black would irritate the hell out of em too. or fly vision lenses and super glue.LOL come on lets be creative,a sock,gum,taped up pics of saggy naked old people.our right to bear arms or their right to bare arms with that saggy sac o flesh.wheeeeeeeee kinda like alternate hits of nitrous and helium.

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    1. Re:A Most Effective Solution by back_pages · · Score: 2
      A pellet gun would be ideal for this, in fact. A CO2 canister .177 or .22 caliber pellet gun is one of the most accurate weapons you can get up to about 50 yards. Some more expensive models claim a .25" spread at that range. They're also very quiet, about as loud as dropping a rock onto the sidewalk. They're also far less regulated than powder burning weapons, often legal within city limits in less-than-metropolis areas.

      I have a cheap pellet rifle with a 4x scope, and I'm sure I could take out the lens of a camera at 30 paces, about 70 feet or so. It might not be on the first shot, but I could do it, and I'm certainly not an expert with the thing.

      Now, does the right to bear arms mean we can vandalize property? Um... I dunno, but hell fahr if shootin stuff ain' funner 'an turn two at Bristol!

  30. Re:well check this out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Next thing you know, paranoid women will start keeping a laser pointer in a certain convenient place, causing all sorts of new problems.

    Er, problems for the upskirt camera folks, I mean.

  31. Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by Myriad · · Score: 5, Informative
    Even though he mentions he's using low powered laser pointers, those still have the potential of harming someone.

    No they don't. Casually shining a single laser pointer across someone's eye is not going to cause anyone any damage - unless they punch you out for it.

    Most laser pointers are less than 1 milliwatt in power. That's really, really low. Factor in vibrations and movement and there is no way your going to damage an eye.

    The reason a laser can harm your vision is that the eye sees a laser beam as a point source - it is unable to focus on it directly. Instead, the eye focuses to infinity. The beams light is also virtually parallel, allowing for the entire beam to be focused onto one very small part of the retina.

    The good thing here in terms of pointers and safety is that any movement of the beam in relation to the eye (be it a person in motion, or the natural jitters in your hand) will cause the focal point on the retina to move.

    Thus, in order for a laser to damage your eye it must have sufficient power to burn quickly - the spot being affected changes before cumulative affects can take place.

    Laser pointers don't have that power. Short of bolting someone's head to a table, along with a pointer, then forcing their eyelids open, AND keeping the eyeball still, it's not going to happen.

    This is not to say that staring into your pointer for kicks is a good idea! Don't do it. Don't do it to others. Don't say I told you you could. If nothing else it is incredibly annoying. But it's not about to permanantly blind anyone.

    Now, if you have an unusually high powered pointer (ie those groovy YAG pens) you might be talking a different story.

    I've had much nastier beams in the eye than any laser pointer will ever generate - luckily I've gotten away with it too.

    Frankly I'm much more worried about these yahoos who are taking a wad of them and bundling them together and pointing the results at low flying helicopters or other aircraft.

    Note to anyone tempted to do this: lasers in the sky make a very nice YOU ARE HERE indicator. You're basically pinpointing your position for the Cops. None to bright (ack, pun) if you ask me.

    --
    "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
    1. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by 5KVGhost · · Score: 5, Interesting

      A normal laser pointer isn't going to cause any permanent damage, but having one shone in your eyes can certainly be distracting enough to cause a problem if you're driving when it happens.

      Red dots appearing out of nowhere can also spook people into thinking that they're being targeted with a laser gun sight. And if you're a police officer (or the Maryland-DC area with the recent plague of random sniper attacks) that might not be an entirely unreasonable fear.

    2. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by Rolo+Tomasi · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Red dots appearing out of nowhere can also spook people into thinking that they're being targeted with a laser gun sight. And if you're a police officer (or the Maryland-DC area with the recent plague of random sniper attacks) that might not be an entirely unreasonable fear.

      Sorry, but that's just dumb (I mean using a visible laser as a gunsight). It's been shown in movies, probably because it looks cool or whatever, but if you want to shoot someone, you don't want to be seen, and you don't want to give them an advance warning. And a beam of red light pointing to your location is detrimental to that (granted, depends on atmospheric conditions, but lasers can be seen pretty well most of the time, especially in dark environments). Laser sights have originally been designed for short range, close quarter combat, where you have to aim quickly, but they are completely obsolete by now, and the advantage over traditional iron sights was dubious at best in the first place. For CQB, holographic sights are commonly used, and snipers still prefer the good ole' scope.

      --
      Did you know you can fertilize your lawn with used motor oil?
    3. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by cybercuzco · · Score: 4, Funny

      This reminds me of back in High school, There were a bunch of stoners on the bus who would have "contests" to see how long they could put a laser pointer directly in their eye before it became so physically painful that they had to look away. Im sure theyre all blind now, or polititians.

      --

    4. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by photon317 · · Score: 2


      Another good solution for situations where you want the convenience of a laser sight without the visibility is IR laser sights meant to be used with night vision. The dot is still considerably brighter than the target despite the monochrome vision.

      --
      11*43+456^2
    5. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by CharlieG · · Score: 2

      Yes, "dotting" someone is in bad taste, and in some states (Like NY) a felony - same category as pointing a loaded gun at someone!

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    6. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by Coolfish · · Score: 2

      the back of the eye has no pain receptors, unfortunately. that's why you "can" stare at the sun for a while, and only a few hours later will you realize you're an idiot and are now blind.

    7. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by j-turkey · · Score: 2
      Sorry, but that's just dumb (I mean using a visible laser as a gunsight). It's been shown in movies, probably because it looks cool or whatever, but if you want to shoot someone, you don't want to be seen, and you don't want to give them an advance warning.

      I'm going to have to (conditionally) disagree with the above point. Police officers will typically want people to know that they have their gun on a person. That person is more likely to be subdued when they know where the first one is going.

      Now the case is likely very different for a military sniper, assassin, or a rampage-style serial killer...IANAGF (I am not a gun freak), so YMMV.

      --Turkey
      --

      -Turkey

    8. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by photon317 · · Score: 2


      Well, I guess you're screwed :) It's always an arms race, generally the technologies work best when you've got the tech advantage over the opponent, as is often the case with US-backed military teams versus some small-time third world guys they're raiding.

      In any case, in a close quarters tactical situation nobody stares at their own chest, so it's not like visible or IR dots matter all that much in that sense. They only matter in that if the room is dusty or smoky the beam traces a path back to the shooter. For the most part laser sights for close quarters are an assault technology more than a defensive one - and it's assumed the assailant has the advantage of op planning and the element of surprise - like blowing the lights and going in with night gear in a place that was previously well-lit.

      --
      11*43+456^2
    9. Re:Laser Points Can NOT Hurt You! by photon317 · · Score: 2


      First, it's not obvious where it's coming from without smoke, dust or something else for it to reflect off of. In a normal clean indoor setting, a laser sight is only visible by it's dot, or by looking straight at the gun barrel (like the target would be doing). Come to think of it, I would imagine the laser light coming frmo the shooter would obscue the target's vision, making it ahrd to return fire accurately.

      Well, it's a matter of debate whether they're useful, I'm sure lots of shooters disagree on this. It's not always three feet, close quarters can include targets on the other side of a 20 foot room for example.

      Hitting the bullseye using the instinctive point and shoot method is easy at 20 feet at the range, but when you add the stress and whatnot in a "real" situation, it becomes more difficult. Some people argue that the dot helps - others say finding and focusing on the dot as you aim takes just as much effort as any other method, and adds distraction from all the other things you should be concentrating on.

      --
      11*43+456^2
  32. I'm just going to copyright myself by Treeluvinhippy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Any use of my image with out my consent will be punishable to the full extent of the law.

    Plantiff "We have here your honor is video tape footage of the defendent attempting to steal a Macintosh Computer worth over $3,000 from his local CompUSA a dozen video games also a leather chair, a box of M&M's and even the store manager's goldfish.."

    Me "Your honor, those images are copyrighted 2002 Treeluvinhippy and they do not have written consent of the copyright owner. I motion that the video tapes be removed as evidence and returned to the copyright holder immediatly. If the tapes are allowed as evidence I will have to force to remmind your honor about the FBI warning agaisnt public viewings of copyrighted materials. Your honor is most certainly familar with such warnings
    as it appears at the beginning of every purchased video cassete. You know the one with the blue background and white letters threating five years imprionment and/or a $25,000 fine, certain death and other such unpleasantries."

    --
    >
    1. Re:I'm just going to copyright myself by Reziac · · Score: 2

      Actually, if the tape is rebroadcast, they DO need your permission to use your likeness. This is a major reason why film production uses extras (who have signed off on the rights to use their likeness for that production) when they need warm bodies, not random passing citizens.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:I'm just going to copyright myself by Reziac · · Score: 2

      Prolly no one's sued 'em yet. :)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  33. Re:Somewhat OT: Cameras don't scare bullies by sulli · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Adults can go to jail for assault, kids can't if they're under 17 and don't commit a serious enough one. BIG difference.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  34. Re:What are you? Thief? Rapist? Burglar? Murderer? by dbarclay10 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Am I a rapist, that you must know where I am at all times?

    Am I a burglar, that I must explain my reasons for being in a particular place at a particular time?

    Am I a murderer, that I may not move about freely of my own accord?

    --

    Barclay family motto:
    Aut agere aut mori.
    (Either action or death.)
  35. What about a license plate cloaking device? by pongo000 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've always thought it would be possible to construct license plate frames that bathe a license plate in infrared and/or ultraviolet light, thereby making it "invisible" to speed control cameras (or, for the truly criminal out there, tollboth cameras), or any other CCD device. Would such a scheme actually work? Maybe put some sort of "diffuser" over the license plate to better diffuse the energy...

    1. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by okeby235 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have seen a neato system set up where a person uses a normal camera flash hooked up to a light sensor. When the flash of the speed camera goes off the camera flash attached to the car goes off too. The resulting bright light whites out the area where the number plate is.

      There are many other solutions too like special 'strips' that go over characters on your numberplate and make them invisible when not looked at straight on.

    2. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by xtal · · Score: 2

      I've built one of these. It works very, very well. Never tested it in practice though, as photo radar was axed here before it got off the ground. The system is known in photography circles as a "slave flash".

      A polarized LCD plate that goes black would work equally well.

      --
      ..don't panic
    3. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by ElectricRook · · Score: 2, Interesting



      DUH... Just take the front license plate off. That's what the cops do to their own cars. Then put the requsite KA4997 license plate frame on the rear license plate. Find the frame in truck stops.

      for those of you who don't know, KA4997 is the old FCC radio license number of the California Highway Patrol. And is used as a code for blue immunity .

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    4. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by Saeger · · Score: 2
      These kinds of license plate covers have been around for a while.

      The list of states & countries that ban these "revenue circumvention devices" is pretty small.

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    5. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by AndroidCat · · Score: 2
      Such a flashy display might draw some attention, like maybe when the driver behind you crashes into something after being blinded.

      Why not just build a bootleg transponder with a stolen code? (Yeah yeah, my SUV is really a big 18-wheeler, yeah, that's it...) Why do I suspect that that those transponders don't have a heavy-duty encyption/indentification method?

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    6. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by cr0sh · · Score: 2
      Maybe - and here is how you could design one (I hereby donate this idea to the public domain):

      Basically, this will only work for vehicles with an area immediately in front of the license plate to put a ball-type tow hitch. What you want to do is create a realistic looking "fake hitch", that can be "bolted" on in place of a normal ball hitch. Mold the casing from plastic, the ball hitch preferably "chromed", or possibly given a fake finish to simulate a used hitch (better for an older beater vehicle). Now, for the goodies:

      Inside the base of the fake hitch (what would be the bolt shaft) put in a relatively high-power IR or Red laser LED or regular LED facing up (toward the ball end). In the ball portion, mount a small motor with a tilted mirror attached to the shaft (ie, a typical right-angle scanner system). On the side of the ball facing the plate, make a clear window, or cut away a window area (or mold it). If using an LED laser, you will need a diffraction grating or something to spread the beam in a line. It might also be possible to build it with a simple or curved mirror, no motor needed. Hook it up to a source of 12VDC in the car.

      The idea is that the mirror spins, bathing the license plate in light - but the whole system looks like a trailer hitch to the "uninitiated" (which, note, some communities/states have laws against driving a vehicle with only a hitch, but no trailer - gotta love that).

      To be honest, I don't know if this would work or not - something tells me that LED lasers and/or LEDs wouldn't be bright enough to illuminate the license plate and still reflect enough to white-out the camera system. But it might be worth trying out!

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    7. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by SerpentMage · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Does not work worth a damm. Why? Because here in Europe they tried that same trick. What did the law do? They computerized the images and then toned down the hues and lo-and-behold a license plate number appeared.

      The problem with this approach is that they difference between the background with the license plate and the numbering is too large and no flash remove the contrast.

      The only one that truly works are polarizers.

      But even now in Europe they are stopping putting out ummanned cameras. People are contesting it too much. For example lets say that you get caught speeding, you say, hey that was my friend in the US. Your friend in the US says, yupe was me. The local law is powerless to do anything. Therefore they now catch speeders the old fashioned way of snapping their picture and then stopping them immediately.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    8. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

      Would not work. In Europe they caught on. The digitize the picture, remove the hues and lo-and-behold a license plate number appears. Downside then is that they have you for speeding and obstruction.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    9. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by Kallahar · · Score: 2

      1) they're illegal (for the products that say they do that) in the US (I think in every state)

      2) so far, anything that blocks infrared light also blocks visible light, which means the cops can tell.

      What the current products do is put a polarizer over the plate, so that in can only be "read" (or reflected) from straight behind the car. So cops on the side of the road won't (theoretically) get a good reading. Unfortunately, this also distorts normal light so during the day a cop might notice and ticket you for altering your license plate.

      Travis

    10. Re:What about a license plate cloaking device? by cr0sh · · Score: 2
      I already said I had my doubts whether my device would work or not. Also, understand that I wasn't thinking about slaving it, rather making it be an "always-on, broad coverage" device (hence, why I hinted at using high-brightness non-focused IR LEDs and mirror).

      Besides, even if it didn't work - that doesn't mean you couldn't sell it. Think of all the "crap" they sell down at auto zone or such, and how this device I described could be built super-cheap, and sell for $20-30.00 or so - you could make a mint (even if it didn't work).

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  36. Ethical Problems, Indeed. by PhxBlue · · Score: 2

    First you say you have ethical problems with video monitoring systems. Then you say, "if the cop isn't paying attention, or isn't there when I blow by their hiding spot in the middle of the road at 105, tough."

    You don't have ethical problems with video monitoring systems. You just have ethical problems with being caught whilst breaking the law and endangering the safety of everyone around you.

    --
    !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    1. Re:Ethical Problems, Indeed. by mobets · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's wrong with doing 105? I can handle it, my car can handle it, and if there arn't any other cars around for me to run into for at least a half a mile, who am I endangering? The only reason going that fast is illeagal is because in most, but not all, situations it is unsafe.

      --

      It was me, I did it, I moved your cheese
    2. Re:Ethical Problems, Indeed. by NeMon'ess · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Suppose a deer jumps into the road and had you been going 60 you could have breaked in time or it would have made it across? A better argument is: how do you know the road conditions won't change suddenly, endangering your car and the people inside it? Current safety features make surviving a crash at 60(mph) quite possible. Surviving a crash at 100mph is far less likely. Even if you take this road every single day, the cop who pulls you over won't know this.

    3. Re:Ethical Problems, Indeed. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2

      Suppose a deer jumps into the road and had you been going 60 you could have breaked in time or it would have made it across?

      The only reason I would brake for a deer is the fact that it will seriously mess up my car. If it's a small woodland creature and i'm going fast, it's roadkill. As a matter of fact, in many places (like maryland), it's illegal to brake in this situation.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    4. Re:Ethical Problems, Indeed. by topham · · Score: 2

      And in other places it can be a fine of $50,000 to hit some protected animal.

      whoops.

    5. Re:Ethical Problems, Indeed. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2

      I live in Southern Ontario where there are deer hits relatively regularly in some areas, and the devastation, even at a low speed, is massive:

      Note the operative word - small. For example, a rabbit.

      You're damn right I'll brake to the greatest extent safely possible. What's that? The person behind me smashed into me? By the rules of the road that is 100% their fault

      Or (in MD) they could claim you were braking to avoid a cat. Then it may well be your fault.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    6. Re:Ethical Problems, Indeed. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2

      That's a thoroughly inconsistent law

      No, it makes a value judgement you disagree with. To wit, the life of a small furry beast is not worth endangering others over.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  37. Polarizer by BSDevil · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've always wondered what would happen if you put a horizontally-polarized plate of plastic over a licence plate...it would still be visible if you stood behind it and looked forwards, but if you're at the angle that photo-radar cameras look from (say 40 degrees in the UK) than it would be blocked.

    On another vein, what about putting an LCD screen in front of the plate, with a photo sensor to detect the flash of the photo-radar camera. Kinda like the thing that they put on satellites to block them being blinded by lasers (but much cheaper) :P

    --
    Cue The Sun...
  38. You're being too logical by GuyMannDude · · Score: 2

    Adults can go to jail for assault, kids can't if they're under 17 and don't commit a serious enough one. BIG difference.

    If you reread my comment, and even yours (!), you'll see that we were originally discussing petty crimes such as "pickpockets, harassment, graffiti, and other crime" so I'm not sure why you are bringing up assult all of the sudden. But even so, I think you are thinking too much about this. You are (I'm assuming) a logical, rational human being. Children and petty criminals tend not to be logical people. You ever ask a kid why they just did something wrong and they respond "I dunno" They just do things on the spur of the moment and don't think about the consequences. And criminals usually think they won't get caught, even if the security camera sees them. If you want real deterernce, I don't think there is any substitute for an authority figure to be right there, ready to take control of the situation. I think the proliferation of surveillance cameras is not such a big help to reducing crime as it is for making people think law enforcement is doing their job.

    You're welcome to your opinion, but I think if someone is going to pick your pocket a video camera is not going to make them think twice about it.

    GMD

  39. Re:What are you? Thief? Rapist? Burglar? Murderer? by wadetemp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In typical freedom-monger fashion, you'll probably continue to recite these little poems until you're raped, and a camera could have seen it, or you're burglarized, and a camera wasn't there. Of course, if you're murdered, you won't be around to care, but your family will probably mourn your loss, and not have any photos to remember you by, because none of them came out.

    In all 3 cases, there will no doubt be a lawsuit involved.

  40. Tha art of not being seen by Chazman · · Score: 5, Funny
    If you don't want to be seen don't stand up from behind the bush.

    Ah. Mister KFG has learned the first lesson in the art of not being seen. Don't stand up. Mister KFG, would you stand up now? KA-BOOM!

    --
    -----Chaz
  41. Interesting by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 2

    I wonder how something like a cap dotted with such LEDs would affect a camera. If nothing else you might be able to freak people out by walking past electronics store windows that have cameras demonstrating in them :)

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  42. Hey, NASA has found another way! by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

    All you do is ignite an explosive bolt within a few meters of the camera- and presto! No more worries about surveillance! ;-)

    --

    -WolfWithoutAClause

    "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  43. Re:What are you? Thief? Rapist? Burglar? Murderer? by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 2

    No, but all of those people would love to know how they can cheaply avoid those things.

    --
    If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
  44. Full HOW-TO article by dstone · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's Michael Naimark's current draft article:
    How To ZAP A Camera

  45. Re:Somewhat OT: Cameras don't scare bullies by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

    An example where these cameras are NOT having any measureable deterent value can be found here [go.com] where bullies on school buses still physically beat other students knowing full well they are being videotaped.

    Do you have more info on this story than the link you provided? Nowhere does it say that the kids "knew full well" they were being videotaped? There is also not a single mention in the article about it's effectiveness as a deterrent (unless of course you want to go by the logic that unless it stops ALL instances of violence, then it's ineffective).

  46. Re:What are you? Thief? Rapist? Burglar? Murderer? by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 2

    Maybe not. But you might be.

    So, for the sake of the children, in this post Columbine and September 11 world, you need to give up some of your freedoms for the sake of the illusion of freedom, provided by Cowboy Neal - The King of Funk!

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  47. A much simpler solution by norkakn · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why don't we just take screenshots from current movies and post them on our shirts, that way the cameras will be making pirated copies of movies and the MPAA will go sue them all. I would say use song lyrics, but the RIAA is busy suing all of the radio stations: http://www.theonion.com/onion3836/riaa_sues_radio_ stations.html

  48. Re:Well, you know.... by ergo98 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This has been proven. Video cameras covered the alleged kidnapping of a girl in our town last year, and they were no use whatever with the police investigation. We have video-footage of several thefts, and car-vandalism, again, these have not been used to solve any crimes.

    Well, gosh, you've proven it there. Because in those incidents the cameras didn't "solve" the crime, clearly cameras are useless. But I'm curious: What information would they have without the cameras?

  49. You morons by teslatug · · Score: 2

    That was probably just a vampire, and he fooled you into letting him go with that laser bunk

  50. Re:It happens EVERY DAY by island_earth · · Score: 4, Insightful
    A cheap webcam mounted on a light pole in her neighborhood could have brought the murderer to justice. But some people would rather indulge in 1984 fantasies....

    It's a thing called "privacy," and it's not something to be given up lightly. Letting the police enter any home at will would, no doubt, find some evidence that would help solve crimes, but most people think there should be some limits on police powers.

    Allowing the government to attach tracking devices to all citizens would prevent a few crimes, too, I think. Should we all go downtown to get our implants tomorrow?

    For any hideous crime you can identify, there are some steps law enforcement could have taken ahead of time that would have prevented it, if only the general public didn't mind having their rights trampled. That's not a reason to hand over the house keys to the government.

  51. There is No Right to Privacy... by kmellis · · Score: 3, Informative
    ...in public.

    Many people today, especially in the US, seem to have gotten it into their heads that they have something like a "natural right" to privacy.

    I will acknowledge that a pretty good argument can be made that we have a right to privacy regarding the most intimate portions of our lives and our bodies. But that's a far cry from expectations of privacy in the public sphere--such as the expectation that one has a right to walk down the street unobserved and unrecognized. Part of what it means to be a member of society is to be accountable for one's actions within that society--anonymity should be the exception, not the rule. Look at how anonymity affects the level and quality of discourse all over the Internet. This is why I have used my real world identiy as my online identity for many years now.

    From the article:

    "I sometimes wonder if I'm living on the same planet as David Brin," said Philip E. Agre, an associate professor of information studies at the University of California at Los Angeles. "Everyone can watch the common people, but that has nothing to do with the political question of who can watch the powerful."
    There is a perfect two-word response to this: Rodney King.
    1. Re:There is No Right to Privacy... by kmellis · · Score: 3, Insightful
      "Accountability" is a euphemism for persecuting the unpopular.
      That's a nice turn of phrase, but it's utter bullshit. "Accountability" is why you (probably) don't tell your spouse that she's/he's annoying the crap out of you right now and you wish they'd just shut up. The things you do and say have consequences beyond merely satisfying your urge to do and say them.

      The quality and level of discourse on the Internet isn't purely a matter of honestly any more than what you say to your spouse is purely a matter of honesty. Honesty is just one virtue among many.

      But even if honesty was paramount in all things, you are wrong if you think that it is the chief characteristic of anonymous Internet discourse. It isn't. Viciousness is the chief characteristic. Viciousness, and the indulgence in a toddler-like anger and hurtfulness just because you can. Truth doesn't require such things; and, for that matter, neither do lies.

      "Accountability" means not avoiding the responsibility for what one says and does. It's part of being an adult, and it's part of being an adult member of civil society.

  52. I Can't Believe What I'm Seeing Here! by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 3, Funny

    Jesus, God, People, it's the New York friggin' Times, fer chrissake!! Just register and get on with your lives! Your individual liberties and right to watch Babylon Five re-runs are not being compromised.

    This is like a goddam circus! You should see yourselves! It's better than anything on The Onion, and scarier...

    1. Re:I Can't Believe What I'm Seeing Here! by CoolVibe · · Score: 2
      This is called electronic civil disobedience. There are already tons of ads on the nyt site, so they'll get their money from advertising anyway. I simply refuse to let them have my info.

      So we work around their silly registration bullshit, and populate their databases with all kinds of bullshit. That'll teach 'em :)

    2. Re:I Can't Believe What I'm Seeing Here! by CoolVibe · · Score: 2
      Why do they _need_ to know who and what I am? I don't block their ads, so they still get ther fscking revenue. Heck, I even click on some ads if I see something interesting. I read their crappy stories, and they get their fucking ad-exposures (and maybe even clickthroughs). Sounds like a fair deal to me.

      So they don't get to know who or what I am, boo fucking hoo.

    3. Re:I Can't Believe What I'm Seeing Here! by CoolVibe · · Score: 2
      No, it's nothing like that.

      Why do need need such a registration in the first place? For a place like slashdot with all the discussion going on it makes sense. For a flimmin' newspaper it doesn't. I'm not blocking their ads or anything, and I might even click when I see something that is of interests, but they won't get my identity from me.

      Know that I do allow a cookie to be set when I get there, so I don't have to poison their databases any more then I have to when I get there (again). If somehow the cookie gets lost (because I'm on a spring-cleaning spree in my $HOME or something), then I generate a new one.

      Actually, the main reason I use that auto-registration thing is because I'm too friggin lazy to think up fake info.

  53. Re:Somewhat OT: Cameras don't scare bullies by sulli · · Score: 2

    As a taxpayer who pays for graffiti cleanup, let me tell you emphatically that it is the right strategy.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  54. Re:Infrared? Ummm... probably not. by 5KVGhost · · Score: 2

    Once upon a time this was true for most digital cameras. "Hot mirror" IR lens filters designed to prevent ambient IR from "leaking" into your photos were popular accessories.

    Nowdays many digital cameras have an IR filter built in (maybe not the cheap models) so I don't know how well your suggestion would work.

  55. Just use Fnords or DRM. by billstewart · · Score: 2
    If you don't see the fnords, they won't eat you.

    There have been proposals to make watermarkish tags that Digital Rights Management RIAA/MPAA-compliant digital video equipment would have to obey by refusing to copy. So all you need is a button displaying the "can't photograph this" watermark and the Fritz-compliant equipment wouldn't be able to use your picture. Unlikely to happen in practice, though.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  56. In retrospect by nenolod · · Score: 2, Informative

    Were you aware that if you were to shine a laser off a window that you could take the mathematical computations and produce a very high quality recording? They dont even have to bug a room now, they can shine a laser at it. So, yeah, lasers have lots of uses.

    1. Re:In retrospect by kfg · · Score: 2

      Yes, and I'm also aware that the US Supreme Court has already ruled this as illegal without a warrant.

      It doesn't mean it won't be done, but at least they won't be able to admit to it or use the recording as court evidence, in the US. YMMV.

      There are also fairly easy and inexpensive means of thwarting this technique, but few will apply them.

      KFG

    2. Re:In retrospect by castlan · · Score: 2

      Do you have any references? This was used as a form of espionage for decades, but I know of no laws regarding it.

      Also, what are the easy and inexpensive protections? Double planing all glass windows and piping subterfuge noise to each interwindow cavity? That doesn't sound inexpensive to me.

  57. You're not quite right by grahamsz · · Score: 2

    As I understand it (IANAL) you can take pictures on a busy street without any real consequence. These people are in public and so long as they are not recognasible and that the image is of the street (and not the individual people) then you should be fine.

    If however you take a picture of someone attending a rocky horror picture show then you are treading on very thin ice. If you choose to sell that picture without a model release then the person in it has a very strong case against you.

    This is further exaggerated since it's possilbe that there are people who dress up for and attend the rocky horror picture show in the knowledge that their workmates and friends dont know about it. If you sold their picture to a magazine or newspaper then they could also probably sue for teh emotional damage called.

    In short, unless you never want to sell the pictures, then you should get a model release signed for any recognisable person. The only major exception is if the image has journalistic value.... although that's not easy to quantify :)

    1. Re:You're not quite right by limekiller4 · · Score: 2

      The issue of whether the picture will ever be sold for profit is just muddying the waters and anathema to the argument -- whether I need consent to capture someones image.

      I maintain that a person does not have some sort of exclusive right to the photons that they have bounced off of their persons. If you believe they do, I'm interested in knowing the source of this 'right.'

      I'm not suggesting that the government has the right to capture our likeness, that places the burden upon me to show up. I am suggesting that if you do appear in a public place, they are not under some sort of obligation to avert their eyes.

      After all, what is a camera mounted in a public place but a policeman with a really good memory? Frankly, I'd rather he had a good memory than a bad one.

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    2. Re:You're not quite right by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2

      There is a difference in the restrictions on private individuals and companies versus the restrictions on the government. There is lots of precendent for this difference in restrictions - for example cops can't use evidence they found on private property without a warrant but if joe shmoe finds the evidence and hands it over to the cops, it is fair game.

      Anyways, my point is that as a private individual you are free to take as many pictures of people in public as you want but the government is not allowed to do so *indiscriminantly*. Disposition of those pictures is another, really unrelated issue as you have pointed out.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    3. Re:You're not quite right by BMIComp · · Score: 2

      Also, as a photographer you own a photograph you take of someone. However, a person has certain rights to his/her likeness. For example, if you were to take a photograph of someone and use it commercially, you could be sued if you did not have the subject sign a talent release.

  58. Don't Like This, But Precedents Exist by reallocate · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't relish the idea of being watched in public anymore than the next person. But, I doubt using technology to observe people in public places is an invasion of privacy. (Private bathrooms are another matter.) Public seems to me the antithesis of private.

    In principle, how is this different than getting a glance from a cop on the beat? Yes, you can see the cop, and you probably won't see the cameras. But, so long as notice is given that an area is under surveillance, the legalities are probably handled.

    Another precedent: Police checking for speeders. They watch us; odds are we don't see them.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  59. Money by namespan · · Score: 3, Funny

    "I've become Big Brother, but I didn't mean to be," Mr. Graham said. "It's just that there's no money in education or scientific collaboration."


    Good to know that personal principles are no match for market economics. Whew.

    --
    Libertarianism is rich wolves and poor sheep playing gambler's ruin for dinner.
  60. Double Standard for Video Tape by Uggy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The main problem as I see it with the whole "put video cameras all over public areas" is that we as humans tend to judge the subjects in these recordings by a different standard than we judge ourselves. This is a well studied phenomenon. We do things all the time that when viewed by others are seen as worse than how we see those same acts.

    How many times have you heard the words "I can't believe I did that!" or "I don't really do that, do I?" after watching themselves on a video tape.

    It's pretty easy to judge others, but we almost never apply the same standards to our own behavior.

    You could see the jurors in that child beating in the parking lot vilifying the woman and taking away their child, but going home and smacking their kids around. Not until someone tapes them and confronts them with it, would they realize how bad it looks. But I... I didn't mean... I uh, um, etc.

    Did they hit their kids? Yes. Should we as a society start playing self-righteous Church Lady with video tape evidence at all instances?

    Emphatically, No!!

    --
    Toddlers are the stormtroopers of the Lord of Entropy.
    1. Re:Double Standard for Video Tape by back_pages · · Score: 2
      Good comment. That was my reaction after watching that video tape. I mean, you couldn't even SEE what was going on inside the vehicle. You certainly couldn't establish a history of this behavior from the video tape. I never heard any audio for the tape (though there may have been in court).

      Was the mother over the line? Sure, but even my mother kicked my ass once in awhile and I'm sure it did me good. Should the woman receive punishment for it? Probably. Was it right to smear her face all over national media, take her child from her custody, and make such a big deal about it? In my opinion, absolutely not. How were the interests of that child met by removing her from her home that some supervision and counselling for the mother would have failed to provide?

      I'm all for protecting the children in vicious cases of child abuse, but I'm not talking about the stuff I saw on that video tape. This was a case of mob justice in a courtroom, where a single instance of a non-brutal but admittedly bad situation has split a family apart. Was it Thomas Jefferson said it was better to let a thousand guilty men go free than to wrongly convict one innocent man? It just seems to me that in this case we made an example of one mother so that millions had a chance to say, "Child abuse, how sinful!" rather than question whether their behavior resembled what they saw on that tape.

  61. Disqualified Presidential Candidates by Uggy · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...Or just think of all the potential presidential candidates that would be disqualified for being nose-pickers.

    Worker on phone with headquarters

    "We can't support that candidate, sir. He was caught on a Walmart security camera rooting around in his nose."

    "No, we couldn't supress it. CNN's already got copies. You think Ford's stumbling was bad... Sir, we're going to have dump him. Inviable candidate. Need to find someone with shorter softer nose hairs and less mucus buildup."

    "Yes sir, we'll start looking for a clean nose right away. There's nothing more important in a presidential candidate natually clean nasal passages."

    --
    Toddlers are the stormtroopers of the Lord of Entropy.
  62. Indeed, Air Safty by Myriad · · Score: 4, Interesting
    A normal laser pointer isn't going to cause any permanent damage, but having one shone in your eyes can certainly be distracting enough to cause a problem if you're driving when it happens.

    Indeed. The temporary blindess (the same as if a flash bulb had gone off in your face) can cause issues when controlling all sorts of vehicles.

    One of the major fears of law enforcement is precisely this problem. I've written about this before on /., but the scheme goes like this:

    - Terrorists (or your bad guy of the day) purchases a 3watt solid state YAG laser (yours for only $12,000) and a pair of scanning galvos. Now he has a powerful, portable rig than can run off an AC inverter or other portable power source. Lets say this rig is mounted to a van.

    - Go park your van at the end of a runway and proceed to scan the laser back and forth across the cockpits front window. With a tight scan pattern you are highly likely to scan across the pilots eyes.

    - This won't blind the pilot for any long period of time... but final approach and near touchdown are critical stages in a landing. Startle or distract the pilot and you might be able to crash the plane.

    - While everyone is responding to the crash you drive away... leaving no evidence.

    Nasty, nasty thought.

    --
    "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
    1. Re:Indeed, Air Safty by Wes+Janson · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's odd. I recall reading a book with an extremely similar scenario. I believe it might have been a Clancy novel, or else a similar modern-day military thriller. I believe the setup was a US intelligence team deliberately crashing a Chinese aircraft with defectors on it (or something similar, they were important people). They set up in a hotel room at the end of the runway, and as the plane went to land, directed an extremely bright semi-focused beam into the cockpit, blinding the pilots and causing the plane to crash. I believe it was a government-sanctioned hit, although maybe it was some other group (I forget, it's been a while). I think it was in either China, Japan, or Korea.

    2. Re:Indeed, Air Safty by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 3, Informative

      It was Debt of Honor, which is indeed by Clancy. The aircraft in question was a Japanese 767-AWACS bird, and the light was essentially a high-powered spotlight; Clancy described it as having a beam width of 40 feet at a mile's distance, and being bright enough to read a newspaper at the same distance. And yes, it was shined into the cockpit on short final, causing a crash. IIRC, John Clark and Ding Chavez executed the mission.

      --
      Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
    3. Re:Indeed, Air Safty by rosewood · · Score: 2

      Is it possible to use some form of comercial grade laser to make an AF jet think it is being painted for missle lock?

    4. Re:Indeed, Air Safty by MountainLogic · · Score: 2

      Also John Nance wrote a book where lasers are used to blind airline pilots

    5. Re:Indeed, Air Safty by DustMagnet · · Score: 2

      There were problems with this in Las Vagas. Not from terrorists, just casinos. Here's a page about it.

      --
      'SBEMAIL!' is better than a goat!!
  63. Punisher 2099 by aztektum · · Score: 2

    I won't be happy until I have a yellow pixelated skull replacing my head on camera

    --
    :: aztek ::
    No sig for you!!
  64. Permissions... by dargaud · · Score: 4, Informative
    Then you are a very uninformed amateur photographer and whoever modded this up as 'insightfull' is wrong.

    In most countries (US, Europe...), the law says that you can take pictures in public places, but selling them or broadcasting them is something else entirely: anyone who can recognise himself on a picture can oppose its use. 'Recognisable' must be taken in a very broad sense, for instance if you take a picture of Big Ben at 2:13 on a given day and there's one tiny person at the bottom, that person will be able to say: 'it was me waiting there at that time', then you need that person's permission.

    This means that whenever you take a picture with someone in it, you should have them sign a 'limited time use' form (unlimited has no value).

    So the person who takes the picture owns it, but the person on it can oppose its use. This means that if you take a picture in a crowd and a dork goes: "Hey you! You can't take my picture, gimme that film !", he has no right to ask you for the film, although all you can do with the pic is look at it at home.

    That doesn't help the current argument much though.

    --
    Non-Linux Penguins ?
    1. Re:Permissions... by cybaea · · Score: 4, Insightful
      for instance if you take a picture of Big Ben at 2:13 on a given day and there's one tiny person at the bottom

      Probably a bad example: Unlike most other European countries, the United Kingdom does not have and provisions in law that gives you a right to privacy. If you are in a public place, then you are in public, and I can take your photo and publish it to my heart's content.

      There is a code that the newspapers tend to follw which says that you shouldn't publish pictures of people taken with "very" long telephoto lenses without their consent, but that is just a code of practice, not law.

      All of this is likely to change at the European convention on human rights -- which does have a provision guaranteeing some privacy -- is incorporated into British law.

      Always remember that (1) not all the world is like the US and (2) if you take any advice given on /., in particular legal advice, serious, then you deserve everything you get...

      --
      Hi!
    2. Re:Permissions... by limekiller4 · · Score: 2
      dargaud writes:
      "Then you are a very uninformed amateur photographer and whoever modded this up as 'insightfull' is wrong. In most countries (US, Europe...), the law says that you can take pictures in public places, but selling them or broadcasting them is something else entirely..."

      Please re-read my original post; I made no mention of the subsequent use of the pictures, but merely that I took them. You later write:

      "This means that if you take a picture in a crowd and a dork goes: "Hey you! You can't take my picture, gimme that film !", he has no right to ask you for the film, although all you can do with the pic is look at it at home."

      ...and wind up countering your own argument, since this is precisely what I do with my pictures.

      But the issue of whether I can sell or re-broadcast the pictures is a red herring, a non sequiter. The question is whether you have the right to not be photographed. Introducing issues such as commercial use merely muddies the water.

      So my question stands -- from where does this "right" to not be seen derive?

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    3. Re:Permissions... by FurryFeet · · Score: 3, Informative

      You, sir, don't know what you're talking about.
      I'm a reporter, and I routinely take AND publish pictures of people who do not want me to, including criminal suspects. If what you say is true, I'd be in jail; since I'm not, I contend that you ar full of it.
      I would, of course, apologize immediatly upon receipt of proof to the contrary. Links to reputable legal sites are accepted.
      And moderators... insightful? Looks more like uninformed to me...

    4. Re:Permissions... by Teun · · Score: 2
      Good point.

      I'd like to add something from Holland.
      Though I'm not 100% op to scratch with the actual legal text it's aproximately like this:
      1.) You can only record in private places (like your shop) when you clearly tell all coming in and they have a choice to stay out.
      2.)You can not record in a public place without a licence because it's a public place, not your place.
      3.) Not anyone and his dog have access to the (licenced) recordings of public places.

      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  65. Jamming easily thwarted by El · · Score: 2
    1) Hide the camera
    2) Put the camera behind a two-way mirror (like all the ones in vegas, or best yet 3) Decorate your ceiling with thousands of little plastic imitation cameras, all of which look just like the real camera.


    Interesting side note: how effective would this technique be against photo-radar or stoplight photo tickets?

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  66. Re:What are you? Thief? Rapist? Burglar? Murderer? by evilviper · · Score: 2

    "No officer, that can't be me... I had my laser-pointer on... I tave witnesses that will tell you I had it on just moments before that happened, and moments after. Now go jump in a lake."

    The fact is, if they can be averted by any criminals, than only us generally law-abiding citizens have something to loose (freedom), and nothing to gain. In fact, it just might mean that crimes will even flourish, since people will believe that the videocamera will capture everything.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  67. Security by SmokeSerpent · · Score: 3, Funny

    The number of home burglaries commited by hot babes is on the rise.

    --
    All kings is mostly rapscallions. -Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  68. IR-emitting baseball cap? by Nonesuch · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Chuck Chunder writes:
    I wonder how something like a cap dotted with such LEDs would affect a camera. If nothing else you might be able to freak people out by walking past electronics store windows that have cameras demonstrating in them :)
    That sounds very similar to an idea I was considering...

    My variation is to attach a number of small IR LEDs to the underside of the bill of a baseball cap, aimed so as to direct the light towards your nose and cheekbones, to confound facial-recognition camera systems.

    In the winter this could provide some minimal added protection against frostbite :)

    1. Re:IR-emitting baseball cap? by adolf · · Score: 2

      That sounds very similar to an idea I was considering...

      My variation is to attach a number of large IR LEDs around the front license plate and inside of the headlight reflectors, modulated so as to confuse laser speed measuring devices.

      On a clear day this could provide some minimal added protection against speeding tickets.

  69. consider this situation by supernova87a · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The police in my area use intersection cameras to record red light runners. these cameras take a snap of you if you go into the intersection during a red light, and you get mailed a ticket later.

    Even though the camera is in public view, and you could argue that you have as much right to illuminate it as it has to take a picture of you, I think the police would like to talk to you if you started doing this with a laser, no? What do you think?

    1. Re:consider this situation by shaldannon · · Score: 2

      First, I think if you successfully illuminated the camera with a laser, they wouldn't be able to identify you, meaning they couldn't very well have a talk with you on the subject of anti-surveilance techniques. Second, I think this would end up being classified with radar jammers as obstruction of law enforcement, meaning if they caught you doing it, they would be even more unhappy than if you were just speeding or running a red light. Third, I think it would take quite a bit of effort to figure out how to consistently jam the camera. Lasers are directional, meaning you have to get the laser properly angled so the beam blinds the camera when it tries to take your pretty picture; due to differences in camera manufacture and placement, I don't think this would be a trivial exercise. Finally, if you're in the habit of running red lights and want to be more effective at doing it without getting caught, then you're a serious menace to both yourself and passerby and shouldn't be driving to begin with.

      --


      What is your Slash Rating?
    2. Re:consider this situation by supernova87a · · Score: 2

      No, my point is not as a red light runner -- what if I don't agree with the police use of cameras, and sit on the street corner shining my laser at it to block *other* people from getting caught? What then??

  70. Re: speed cameras by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Perhaps you didn't read the story on these speed cameras then? At least as they're being used in the United States, they're not trustworthy at all. The big problem is, they're installed and maintained by 3rd. parties.... *not* by the police themselves. In fact, these commercial companies taking care of the photo radar cameras are getting kickbacks from each fine levied against a speeder. Therefore, it's in the best interest of the company to generate as many tickets as possible with their systems. (EG. Not really sure you can read all the letters on the license plate in that photo? Oh well, let's just assume that fuzzy letter is an E, and issue a citation against the owner of that plate.)

    How do we know the things are even calibrated correctly? Oh, we're supposed to *trust* the companies contracted with the police depts. to ensure their systems are accurate! Of course, how silly of me.

    Bleah.... Surveillance is fine by me, but automated systems trying to take the place of human judgement never work out very well.

    A security camera in a store does not (at least in the current form) actually determine your guilt or innocence, and places its own call to authorities. It merely records what it sees on tape, for humans to review later. That's a bit different from an automated photo radar system that selectively snaps pictures of those it determines "guilty" because they operated a vehicle outside its parameters. Such systems require much closer scrutiny.

  71. Why am I a criminal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I find it offensive if someone is trying to record everything I do. I like my privacy. I don't commit crimes, I don't even download mp3's. Why should I let the government treat me like a criminal when I haven't even been charged of a crime. And they would be treating me like a criminal if they used cameras because that constitutes surveillance! Surveillance is defined at http://www.dictionary.com as:

    1. Close observation of a person or group, especially one under suspicion.
    2. The act of observing or the condition of being observed.

    So if I am under surveillance, I must be under suspicion. What am I under suspicion for? I haven't committed any crimes, no one has even accused me of anything. Why am I upset? I guess you could say that I don't like being treated like a criminal when I have done nothing wrong.

  72. Re:It happens EVERY DAY by MikeFM · · Score: 2

    A cheap webcam mounted in the yard or house would have done the same thing without invading the privacy of the neighborhood. If you want to be on camera install your own.

    I have no problem with cameras in public but the government recording me is an entirely different thing. I don't want a giant database following me around using cameras and face recognition software.

    Oh and as somebody who has had friends murdered.. there can never be justice. There can only be revenge. That will never bring the dead back and rarely does it protect others from the same fate.

    If you want to protect yourself and those you care about then learn basic self defense, make them learn it, make your home as secure as possible, and don't do stupid things like opening the door to strangers. Basics every child is taught and then forgets when they grow up.

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  73. Solution to upskirt cams? by phorm · · Score: 3, Funny

    Ladies, if you are worried about indecent individuals who are now legally able to look up your skirt you now have a solution. Simply purchase a pen-laser, a little duct tape, and attach it to your underwear aiming at a downward angle. Any potential peepers will end up with a bad case of the blinks and hopefully very unpleasant itch for awhile. Camera will be blanked out.

    Actually, I originally meant this to be somewhat humourous, but I wouldn't be surprised if I see these in the next lingerie magazine.

    Not that I, um, read lingerie magazines or anything... they're my girlfriend's... - phorm

  74. A Challenge for You by jagapen · · Score: 2

    Simply this: Try to go through life without entering public spaces.

  75. Re:Well, you know.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "Crime has effectively ceased"

    No. It has simply been displaced. But what do you care... not your problem anymore.

  76. Re:Infrared? Ummm... probably not. by MsWillow · · Score: 3, Informative
    You asked about high-power UV LEDS anbd / or lasers, particularly those in the near-violet range? Hmm, there *are* high-powered UV LEDs in the 395nm range. They come with lots of warnings about the damage that the UV can do, but they run under $3 each. Check them out here, just shy of half-way down the page.


    I was looking for these earlier today - not for jamming Big Brother, but for use in a display of color-change gem materials. Most gem materials change fine under fluorescent light, but some work better between 395 and 400nm, which these LEDs will cover admirably.

    --

    Lemon curry?
  77. Re:Somewhat OT: Cameras don't scare bullies by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

    You're right, I haven't seen one. Keep this in mind though, kids have to be told all the time not to run out in the middle of the street. Just because kids do things that don't seem to make a lot of sense to you and me, doesn't mean that adults (generally) do them to. The criminal element for the most part does not like getting caught, kids are often too ignorant to care.

  78. Re:Infrared? Ummm... probably not. by MsWillow · · Score: 2, Informative

    So, you really want ultraviolet. Just barely into that range will work.

    Try here for high-powered short-wave UV LEDs.

    --

    Lemon curry?
  79. Re:It happens EVERY DAY by nels_tomlinson · · Score: 2
    Letting the police enter any home at will would, no doubt, find some evidence that would help solve crimes, but most people think there should be some limits on police powers.

    Right on both counts.


    Allowing the government to attach tracking devices to all citizens would prevent a few crimes, too, I think. Should we all go downtown to get our implants tomorrow?

    I don't think that anyone sane would object to that idea, if we could trust our government not to abuse those implants. I don't think that anyone sane would trust this government, or any other. You don't have to be part of the tin-foil hat brigade to agree with Lord Acton [1].

    If the government wants more powers to observe us, they should begin by earning our trust. Consistantly not abusing the powers we have already given them, and consistantly punishing those who do abuse those powers, would be a great start.

    [1] Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. -- Lord Acton

  80. A lot different, unless RoboCop roams your streets by geekotourist · · Score: 4, Interesting
    A policeman glances at you. Unless he already knows you, he doesn't have your name. Even if he knows you, unless he writes your name down he isn't going to remember much more than "I saw Fred earlier this week, perhaps near Crispy Cream? or was it Dunkin?"(1) He knows nothing about where you were or where you're going if you're out of his view.

    A camera tapes you. If one tape-reviewer doesn't know who you are, he can ask around until he finds someone who does. The tape can be matched with other tapes in the area to see where you were and where you're going. The tape can be stored so that, a few years from now, the 'eventually will be better than 50% accurate' facial scanning system will identify you.

    Not insignificant differences, especially if you live in a large town where the chances that any individual officer knows you is vanishingly small

    (1) People rewrite a memory each time they play it: the stronger the emotion involved in a memory, the more likely it is to be inaccurate. A recent study asked people about their 9/11 memories: a huge % of people remembered watching the one tape of WTC North being hit on 9/11 itself, even though that tape didn't come out until the next day. Similar research occured with Challenger: a professor had students write down their memories on the day after, and then two years later asked them about those same memories. Less than 25% of students remembered most or all of that day correctly. Most had at least one major detail wrong. Except for the very rare person, we don't have anything like a video camera in our brain. Or if we do, the video camera is run by a 5 year old- never stays focused on one thing for very long, and easily distracted by bright, shiny or chocolately things.

  81. Interesting situations may arise from this.... by theLOUDroom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It appears that laser jamming of optical devices has some very interesting legal ambiguities.

    Consider this situation:

    My neighbor goes out and buys and X10 camera and puts it on the front of his house. My house is directly across the street. I don't want a camera contiuously looking at me so I buy a $10 tripod and a $10 laser pointer, and aim it right at his camera. I leave it on continuously, making the camera worthless.


    Is this legal or is one of us doing something illegal? I'm sending unauthorized photons onto his propoerty. He's recieving photons from my property without authorization. Neither one seems to be explicitly ilegal.

    Seems like a couple lawyers could have a lot of fun with this one. What who you do if you were either the neighbor or myself? What is instead of being a neighbor's camera it was a camera at a local park, across the street?

    Of couse, in reality, they'd probably think the camera was broken, replace it a few times, and then give up.

    --
    Life is too short to proofread.
    1. Re:Interesting situations may arise from this.... by radja · · Score: 2

      cameras owned by private persons and companies are not allowed to view public space so people can be recognized, or at least that's how it is in the netherlands... //rdj

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
  82. Welcome America, to surveillance. by skinfitz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Quite interesting reading this discussion - in the UK we've had cameras everywhere for some time now and the excuse is always that it "would have prevented [insert recent crime]". Problem is they have been proven to not really affect the level of crime, but can seriously improve investigations.

    If governments could get away with it, we'd all be subcutaneously tagged with GPS tracking devices with cameras in our homes, this, naturally would also "would have prevented [insert recent crime]" which is the generic argument that "they" use.

    We've sadly had a few prominent child abductions and murders recently in the UK, and I predicted that someone would bring out some form of implanted child tracking device. Lo and behold the nutter Kevin Warwick has the same idea and uses it to get some publicity.

    So we all get our kids chipped... now - how many people think that once it becomes "standard practice" to have children chipped at birth, how long will it be before it's illegal to remove the chips?

    Oh hello Big Brother - you're late.

  83. Re:Culpability by Catbeller · · Score: 2

    I believe that falls under trademark law, not copyright law. You can trademark your image.

    And if not, it's just an example of rights businesses and corporations have that individuals don't.

    In a libertarian society, which we developing, you get what rights you can pay for. Sadly.

  84. I'd still object by theLOUDroom · · Score: 2

    I'd still snely object for a ton of reasons but I think I only need to give one: Even if we could trust the gov't, what's to say no one else is going to figure out how to track our every move using the implants?

    --
    Life is too short to proofread.
  85. Re:It happens EVERY DAY by Catbeller · · Score: 2

    Government, government, government.

    For most of a century now, there has been this meme on the loose which posits that goverment is some evil force, tho sometimes necessary, which is corrupt and needs to be reined in whenever possible.

    The goverment is US. I'm not afraid of the guvmint! I'm afraid of my neighbors! Of the collective dumbness of my fellow countrymen!

    The evil and wickedness, we ascribe to goverment, is actually our own. It's the classic scapegoat; the animal upon which the collective sins of the people are dumped.

    The People loved Hitler, loved McCarthyism, loved Nixon, hate the press, and yes, can be led by the nose. We're going to attack a defeated nation, and this country is in favor of it. Where's the sanity?

    I fear my neighbors with cameras. I fear cults with cameras. For example downtown Clearwater, Florida, is carpeted with high rez and telescopic cameras. Why? What are they doing with them? Why are they recording everyone's movements?

    I can deal with a policeman watching a street corner remotely. I can deal with a paranoid security force watching for terrorists, since I'm not Arabic-looking, I suppose. But I am in stark terror of corporate cameras, private investigator cameras, and private police service cameras. The Guvmint is ultimately under control fo the citizenry, no matter how deluded they can be. But the private cams... what will they evolve into?

  86. Go back to life by korpiq · · Score: 3, Interesting


    Go straight back to life without entering public places. Do not collect the bones.

    Seriously, this is a real matter. "Collecting photons" is off the point like all matter being energy is off the point when it hits your body at 300mph.

    When someone can analyze someone else's actions without risking the same, that gives the analyzer power over the victim. In a "civilized" society that power would be spread equally. Not sharing the power leads to despotism, which, in turn, leads to anger. Anger leads to things taking each other apart. Very much like in that 300mph example. Or "Fight Club" for that matter.

    --

    I think, therefore thoughts exist. Ego is just an impression.
  87. Re:Culpability by DGolden · · Score: 2

    I reckon we're under way to little surveillance - but that that includes the people doing the watching. If everyone could watch everyone else, there would be less information flow imbalance, and elites with surveillance tech would not have quite so much power (like the police and government do now).

    David Brin's thesis in his book "The Transparent Society: Will Technology force us to choose between Privacy and Freedom?" is that given that surveillance technologies have already been rolled out, and they're not going to go away, no matter how people with laser pens try (imagine multiple, hidden, cameras), the best response is to embrace the technology, and make it as easy for me to watch the police as it is for the police to watch me, enshrine that right in law, and be done with it.

    That is to say, the only way to avoid an Orwellian dystopia might be to embrace "total societal transparency".

    I strongly suggest that both privacy advocates and "think of the children" police-state types read his book - it illustrates the fundamentally illogical nature of both their positions. The first chapter is available online here

    I do disagree with him on some points- e.g. I think the explosive growth in webcams suggests that a move toward total transparency might begin, not end, in the home.

    Note also that strong crypto is still vital in such a society, for authentication rather than information-hiding...

    --
    Choice of masters is not freedom.
  88. Re:Well, you know.... by cybergibbons · · Score: 2

    Are you talking about Croydon by any chance?

  89. Sports Players Names by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 2
    I have wondered about that?

    What law prevents games companies from including real player's names in games unless they pay FIFA/UEFA/FA etc.

    Have they all trademarked "Beckham", "Seaman", etc. or is it the dubious concept of copyrighting information (as opposed to the expression of it).

    After all, despite what some fans think, there are several dozen "David Seaman" in the UK alone (yes the electoral roll is public information. God knows why it took Dave Gorman more than 10 seconds (with appropriate software) to look up his namesakes).

    And yes I did work on a no-license game that died a death, and a big-licence game that sold bucketloads. Getting the right names in the product is very important to consumers (gameplay far less so).

  90. Watermark your T-shirt by meringuoid · · Score: 3, Funny

    Then the camera, being a good trusted DRM-compliant appliance, will realise it has no licence to look at you and promptly shut itself down...

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  91. Re:Well, you know.... by blibbleblobble · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well, gosh, you've proven it there. Because in those incidents the cameras didn't "solve" the crime, clearly cameras are useless. But I'm curious: What information would they have without the cameras?

    My point was that CCTV footage has rarely to never been used to solve crimes. The specific example being a TV camera watching a girl's kidnapping. Despite being able to identify many people walking down that street, no clues were ever provided which helped to find the person.

    More famous example: we've all seen the CCTV footage of two teenagers kidnapping a young boy from a shopping mall. Can anyone tell me how useful they were then? Did security staff react? Did the police react? No, they showed it on the evening news.

    Example from work: Colleague's car was vandalised. In a well-lit private carpark with cameras every 50 metres. Nobody was ever caught.

    Another example from that same office: same well-lit, surveilled car park. Stack of unix machines were stolen from the office, and carried through bushes to a car at the nearby motorway. Cameras missed it all. Nobody was ever caught.

    Personal example: my bike was stolen from luggage-van of a train. Station CCTV cameras have a clear, close-up view of the faces of each and every person involved in that theft. Was the bike found? No. Were any of the thieves found? No.

    Your point seems obvious: surely cameras are better than no cameras. A chance piece of evidence is better than no chance. That is arguably true, but only if you discount cost.

    Outdoor high-street surveillance cameras cost a lot more than anything you'd use in your office-security. High-res cameras, remote-control servos, and the sheer installation cost of taking up the street and planting a tower in it add up to a lot of cost. I see quotes of $4000 upwards for even the smallest cameras, without installation or cabling.

    Policemen on £40,000 per year are then paid to watch these cameras. At several policemen per installation (often in a control room shared between several towns), that's a lot of money per hour. Add the cost of data-connections and the control-room itself, plus a beaurocratic overhead.

    The reason this hindering, rather than being irrelevant to safety, is: This is money not being spent on improving the safety of our streets. Good street-lighting, building design, town design, police patrols, special constables, neighbourhood-watch, these are the measures which are proven to reduce crime, and these are the measures which are having their funding cut to pay for CCTV cameras.

    What use is a town with not enough money to keep a police station open, if they have five-thousand-pound camera installations in every corner of every road? Even places as large as Nottingam, it's not unknown to have 3 or 4 police on duty at night, to cover vast swathes of the city. Break-ins occur at the same time/same place every night, and there was simply not enough police resource to send a guy there to arrest the burglars. Response times of many hours are typical. "Sorry we're late, but you're looking at the night-watch, both of us" a young policeman told me last time they responded to a call, 9 hours later.

    I hope that some of those answers clarify my question a bit better: surveillance cameras are bad not because of the implicit somebody-watching-you (police patrols watch you too), but because they simply don't work, and divert valuable resources from schemes that do work.

    So, in answer to "But I'm curious: What information would they have without the cameras?"

    They'd have information from the patrol cars driving around.

  92. Re:Well, you know.... by ColdGrits · · Score: 2

    "More famous example: we've all seen the CCTV footage of two teenagers kidnapping a young boy from a shopping mall. Can anyone tell me how useful they were then?"

    Ah, I believe you are referring to the kidnapping and murder of Jamie Bulger.

    The toddler whos killers were caught precisely BECAUSE of that CCTV footage of which you are so disparaging.

    So to answer your question of "how useful were they [the CCTV cameras] then?", I would say "Absolutely vital".

    --
    People should not be afraid of their governments - Governments should be afraid of their people.
  93. How to get arrested by cybercuzco · · Score: 2

    Easy way to get arrested: Go to a pollitical rally where the president will be present and shine a laser pointer anywhere on the presidents body. Chances are the secret service will swarm all over you and potentially shoot you. Fun for the whole family!

    --

  94. Re:A lot different, unless RoboCop roams your stre by shaldannon · · Score: 2

    I recall seeing a show on TLC about the camera systems in London used for tracking people, especially shoplifters. Some of the systems they showed off were capable of taking a blurry shot and finding a good match in a database of photos. Not sure what kinds of software techniques are available to match two different photos to the same person, but according to the show, accuracy was pretty good (I want to say something like 90%+). Scary that you sometimes don't even need to lean over to the camera operator next to you for a second opinion on whether that's John or Joe Doe....

    --


    What is your Slash Rating?
  95. Re:What are you? Thief? Rapist? Burglar? Murderer? by FurryFeet · · Score: 2

    Am I a copyright infringer, that you must place DRM an all content and monitor my internet usage?
    Oh, wait, you're already doing that... nevermind...

  96. Re:Well, you know.... by uncoveror · · Score: 2

    While a few may be using lasers and other devices to escape the view of surveillance cameras, others are lining up to get in on "The game." It could be 1984 by 2004!

    --
    The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
  97. Courts Will Say: No Right To Privacy in Public by reallocate · · Score: 2

    Surveillance of public places is very common in the UK, and has been for years.

    In the U.S., private sector surveillance has been very common for years, too. At work, in hotel lobbies, restaurants, stores, malls, sports facilities, toll gates, etc. Look around, odds are you'll see a camera.

    People instinctively resent surveillance, for obvious reasons. No one likes being "spied on". A court challenge, however, would first need to prove you have a right to expect privacy in a public place. That's very unlikely to happen.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  98. Re:Cameras are inherantly insecure and vulnerable by silicon_synapse · · Score: 2

    While an air rifle is arguably ok, NEVER fire a firearm at a camera anywhere near town. Those bullets don't magically disappear when you hit or miss the camera. They fall somewhere with deadly force. If you're lucky you'll just have to pay for an expensive side of beef.

  99. Its legal by j-turkey · · Score: 2
    "It's possible that Harry Potter's invisibility cloak may not be viewed as a good thing for the community," said Kevin Kelly, an editor at Wired magazine. "We have laws prohibiting jamming police radar. It will be interesting to see if camera-jamming becomes illegal."

    IANAL, but to answer Kevin Kelly's concerns about legality of laser jamming. His analogy with police radar has no prescedent. The police radar is governed by the FCC, and citizens aren't allowed to deliberately interefere with radio devices. However, lasers are governed by the FDA -- and jamming police laser (lidar, actually) is, and alwas has been completely legal (except in VA).

    For more information, check this out. Its a laser jammer test, but has some information on the law of laser (lidar) jamming.

    Disclaimer: radartest.com kind of sucks. It is not all objective and they're particularly biased against the Valentine Research manufacturer of radar locators due to a personal vendetta between the two companies' founders/owners.

    --

    -Turkey

  100. Right to see what they see? by RichardX · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As far as I'm aware, here in the UK you have a right to view any footage recorded of you on a CCTV camera so long as it's not a matter of national security or anything like that. The owner of the CCTV camera has a right to charge a fee for digging out the footage (around 10 UKP, I believe). Mark Thomas did a great job with this, forcing companies to dig through their CCTV archives, and found, not surprisingly, that most either claimed they had no footage of him (despite the fact that he had footage of himself being filmed by their CCTVs), or gave him incomplete footage (for example the company who had his removed with more-than-necessary force from their carpark, while in view of their CCTV)

    Well, anyways. You have a right to see what they do, in the UK at least. Could be handy

    --
    Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  101. Laser Points Can BLIND You! by Reziac · · Score: 2

    Shining a low-power laser into someone's eyes can result in TOTAL blindness in a matter of seconds.

    A couple of very basic references (the first that happened to come up on a cursory search):
    http://www.ehss.vt.edu/Programs/OHIH/Las er/04_beam _hazards.htm
    http://www.geocities.com/muldoon432/ Laser_Biologic al_Hazards_Eyes.htm

    In fact, *I* have a small blind spot in one eye, just from being accidentally caught for a fraction of a second by a supermarket scanning laser.

    Just in case you wonder why I come unglued if I catch some moron pointing a pocket laser at people's faces.

    And contrary to your assertion that any movement "will cause the eye to move" -- people have a natural tendency to look directly AT a bright point of light.

    If you don't think this is a hazard, try it on yourself first. Remember not to stare into laser beam with remaining eye.

    As to the "you are here" nonsense, the beam from a laser is itself invisible. It is only made visible by passing thru something reflective, like clouds, fog, or smoke.

    "It's not what you don't know that will hurt you. It's what you DO know that isn't so." -- L.M.Bujold

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    1. Re:Laser Points Can BLIND You! by Myriad · · Score: 3, Informative
      In fact, *I* have a small blind spot in one eye, just from being accidentally caught for a fraction of a second by a supermarket scanning laser.

      I'm sorry, but this is bull. If supermarket scanners were capable of such damage, do you really think they would be allowed? No bloody way. I'm not sure which kind of scanner you are talking about, hand scanner of the kind built into the table, but there is no way it burned you. Absolute puppycock. The only possible way such a thing could have happened is if you'd been mucking about inside one of the large scanners and got beamed. Even then it's very, very, very unlikely. Don't believe me? Go tell your story on alt.laser where many a professional laserist & optical engineer hang out. They'll tell you the same story. In fact someone recently posted a comment along those lines, you'd have loved the response. I can scan a 5watt laser across your eye and you'd be totally fine. In fact, I used to do it routinely as part of laser shows. It's based on power density and exposure. A beam that held in your eye would burn cannot if it is in motion at sufficient speed.

      And contrary to your assertion that any movement "will cause the eye to move" -- people have a natural tendency to look directly AT a bright point of light.

      Not so. If you notice something you tend to look at it. But if you look towards a bright light (or have on projected at you) then your "Blink Response" takes over. You actually turn away and/or blink. Try it, flash a camera bulb at someone not expecting it. They'll avert their eyes.

      Also you must consider the movement of the bodies... just try holding a laser pointer still on one spot at any distance. I guarantee you that it will move about no matter how hard you try to hold it still. The natural twitches in your hand will magnify the further you try to project that beam. Add in any movements of the person being beamed (be it of the body or of the eye itself) and you have a huge range of motion.

      If you don't think this is a hazard, try it on yourself first. Remember not to stare into laser beam with remaining eye.

      I have. I guess you missed that part of my original post. I used to routinely work with high power lasers (5-7 watts typically), both Pulsed and CW. Even a 5 watt CW laser is safe to scan across an audience, as long as the beam remains in motion. I wouldn't point a static beam of that power at anyone though.

      You quote a standard, old, industry joke. That doesn't mean a pointer will do it.

      As to the "you are here" nonsense, the beam from a laser is itself invisible. It is only made visible by passing thru something reflective, like clouds, fog, or smoke.

      Not quite. The beam isn't "invisible" so much as it's just not aiming into your eye. Since the beam travels in a very straight line, there are no photons being directed away from this path and into your eye. Something must deflect the photons towards you. This is why haze is a favorite.

      But guess what, high humidity can give enough air born particles of water to help diffract the beam. As can engine exhaust from, say, that theoretical helicopter. (BTW, I used that example for a reason - it happened)

      Additionally take into account the fact that in order to see a laser beam it must enough photons have to be deflected towards your eye. Thus a laser will appear much brighter to someone looking towards the source, than to the person holding the source. Why? For the person holding the source photons must be reflected back the way they came. To someone looking towards the laser they only need to be diverted a few degrees.

      Also, since we are talking about pointing it towards someone's eye, their eye is very near the beam - photons need only be deflected slightly from their original path to enter the eye. Not so for the person holding the laser, they require a much greater change in direction.

      This is also why a laser appears dimmest when viewed at right angles - the photons must be deflected at a right angle to it's original path to be seen. This is the least likely angle of reflection.

      Unfortunately it is people such as you who are responsible for the ridiculous draconian laws of the CDRH in regards to the use of lasers. The US is the only country in the world where audience scanning is illegal. The variance laws are also way out there. It's a shame, done correctly a laser show is a beautiful thing.

      --
      "They do not preach that their god will rouse them, a little before the Nuts work loose." Kipling, 'The Sons of Martha'
    2. Re:Laser Points Can BLIND You! by Reziac · · Score: 2

      Protest all you want, but I'm the one who didn't have a little black spot in my vision before I happened to get nailed at just the right angle, and DO have a little black spot in my vision after. And passing the beam "across" the eye is one thing. Happening to focus on it square on is quite another. Somewhat after making that post I found another article which did the math and pointed out how even a milliwatt laser can fry sensitive tissue if focused to a point (such as lens to retina).

      Laser repair of detached retinas is basically a method of generating scar tissue by cooking it, so what retina is still there stops falling off the back of the eye. Same principle, but under control rather than random.

      I'll tell you what ticks me off, are people who wave these things around. Yeah, maybe the odds of damaging someone's eyes that way are remote, but so long as the odds are non-zero, is it worth the risk?? You only get one set of eyes.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  102. Honest opinon. by mmol_6453 · · Score: 2

    I can see why he was moderated as "troll," but such moderation is the same level of demonstration of personal bias as what oliverthered was demonstrating.

    But then, oliverthered has the right to free speech, doesn't he? And further, he was demonstrating his opinion that people should be allowed their own opions, even specifying that he wasn't in the same boat as them. (One would normally expect Christian Scientists to make his claim, not agnostics or athiests. Such people as the latter, in this case and cases like it, hold my highest esteem.

    More on-topic:

    Civil rights in a democracy boil down to one thing: How tolerant the majority of the actual voters are towards others' beliefs. If you don't like it, you can go to a dictated nation that supports America's first ten ammendments.

    Personally, I hate the fact that competent medical physicians can be denied access to children, or anyone, who needs medical attention. Heck, I don't even have respect the people who believe that they should pray their way out of sickness.

    God gave us the means to help ourselves, isn't that enough?

    Hope I get oliverthred's moderation in metamod.

    --
    What's this Submit thingy do?
  103. Re:Dangerous drivers are the problem by phorm · · Score: 2

    Mine too, people that drive under the limit in the fast lane are irritating. I was doing about 10-15 over (km), the truck was also speeding excessively when passing me. Hanging out in the right-hand lane I would keep getting stuck behind RV's (it's an incline).

  104. monitor all is the way ;) by DrSkwid · · Score: 2

    If *all* individuals were monitored from birth to death how do you think that would shape society?

    Personally I think that would bring the liberation of us all.

    Either that or the road to insanity!

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  105. Re:Specious Reasoning by Tassach · · Score: 2
    Wouldn't it be cheaper and more effective if we used a pervasive camera system instead of cops?
    Sure, let's put up cameras on every overpass at a cost of hundereds or thousands of dollars per unit, and monitor every single person on the road 24x7x365, so we can find the one nutjob who's gone on a rampage. This is a temporary problem, and needs a temporary solution. Paying overtime to cops to stand on overpasses for the duration of the emergency is a MUCH better solution than having cameras everywhere. Then, after the lunitic has been captured or killed, the cops can get off the overpasses and go back to the local krispy kreme franchise.

    Cameras aren't going to catch this prick. When he's found, it's either going to because some citizen was being observent and called the cops, or because he bragged about it to a buddy and they ratted him out for the reward.

    --
    Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
  106. Passing off by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 2
    As I said above, these are personality rights.

    Yup, that seems to make sense. Looking it up, Cavendish mentions:

    Defamation - successful

    • Monson v Tussauds (1894)
    • Tolley v JS Fry (1931)

    Trademarks - obviously :-)

    Copyright - Failed for "Kojak" (1975) and "Wombles" (1977)

    No law to prevent people from photographing you in public, some privacy rights in the Moral Rights created by the new copyright convention (which mostly don't apply to computer programs).

    Passing Off - failed for "uncle mac radio" (1947), failed for "Kojakpops" (1975), failed for "Abba" (1977) similar to the beckham t-shirt you mentioned, failed for "Wombles" (1977).

    In different countries, "Crocodile Dundee" (1991) and Sesame Street characters have been protected under passing off, and in England "Ninja Turtles" succeeded in 1991, so perhaps the courts here are going more the way of other jurisdictions and buying into the idea of "IP rights holders". And the fact that it is a football game as opposed to a t-shirt or a breakfast cereal might make a difference to the courts.

  107. Low-tech already done by Quila · · Score: 2

    In Germany oncoming traffic will usually warn you of a portable camera ahead that they just passed by flashing their lights. Nobody bothers about the stationary cameras as everyone knows to slow down for them.

    Or there's the story (urban legend/joke?) of a kid a couple hundred yards in front of a camera or a cop with radar with a sign saying "SLOW speed trap ahead" and another kid a couple hundred yards after with a sign saying "Donations welcome."

  108. Hate to say it, but that's exactly the problem by geekotourist · · Score: 2
    Wish I could find an article about this, but not enough time right now... I understand you believe you saw this- so did I, until I read the newspaper article on memories. But here is a timeline that shows it to be unlikely...

    The one WTC 1 film was caught by those 2 brothers- French filmmakers- documenting the life of a FDNY rookie. (Their documentary was shown on CBS months later- quite moving.) As each brother had hung out with different firefighters that day, they didn't even know if the other brother was alive for many hours after the attack/collapse. They didn't get back to the firehouse for hours, and at that point they were just waiting to see if their friends- the firefighters- were alive.

    So at the time you think you saw this tape, the filmmakers hadn't yet come back to the firehouse, let alone go through their tapes to pull out that shot.

  109. Re:Sorry by cr0sh · · Score: 2
    Ok, I understand what you mean about the wavelength issue - someone else brought up the idea of using a green laser pointer from Thinkgeek as opposed to the red/IR systems. If these stoplight systems really do use a filter system as you say, then my idea goes kaput, because I was thinking of something cheap and easy to manufacture.

    With that said, however, you don't seem to understand that I was envisioning an "always-on, broad spread" laser or LED system for illuminating the license plate - ie, it would be illuminated at all times, cover the whole plate, and thus a portion of the light (whether visible red or IR) would be seen from any angle.

    Heck, maybe somebody could build these things anyhow, sell them at auto-zone and make money, even if they don't work - after all, people do buy those hanging fuzzy dice (amongst other junk you see).

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon