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Traffic Cams Co-opted for Surveillance

Aardpig writes "The Register has a brief piece reporting that some traffic-monitoring CCTV cameras in London are offline today, for "operational reasons so that maintenance can be performed". Coincidentally, or not, the offline cameras happen to lie along the route of today's May Day demonstrations. As The Reg points out, the same happened earlier this year, during two of the anti-war demonstrations which took place in the capital. The UK is already one of the most monitored states in the world, as far as CCTV monitoring goes. Does this bode ill for our future privacy, or is this a necessary measure to maintain safety at large protests?"

2 of 67 comments (clear)

  1. No Privacy Possible in a Public Place. by cloak42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're in public and you're doing something, it's not a matter of privacy. It is by definition impossible to have privacy when everybody else is there, too.

    So if the government wants to preempt the use of a surveillance camera to keep tabs on a public location, I see no problem with that.

    Now, if the government turned one of those cameras toward my bedroom window, I might get a little miffed.

    1. Re:No Privacy Possible in a Public Place. by missing000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Privacy is not the issue.

      Access to information is the issue
      The government either wants to keep the parade quiet, and / or they want the ability to beat and gas the crowd without people watching it live.

      Any government that abuses people in the name of "privacy" is really evil.