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Internet + Wireless Cameras = Homeland Security

NumberField writes "According to an article by Steven Levy posted on MSNBC, Jay Walker of PriceLine fame is talking about a system he calls US HomeGuard. His plan is to hire large numbers of unsophisticated users to monitor Internet-connected security cameras looking for suspicious activity. Although many security details (i.e., DOS attacks, cryptography, privacy) need to be handled carefully, it's a weird enough idea that it might actually work..."

397 comments

  1. Sign me up by ArmenTanzarian · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm graduating and I don't have a job yet. Define unsophisticated... Sounds like a great job, all the fun of being a rent-a-cop without the worry of ever having to stop anyone or get beaten up!

    1. Re:Sign me up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Armen-get with the program, or go back to whatever country your sires sold out. In America, we don't abide by fascist dictator Nazi spy on the private citizen for their own good horse sh*t. Put down the crack pipe, and see if you can get your tuition money back.

    2. Re:Sign me up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just couldn't believe it, Linus was going to the bathroom to take a dump. This is certainly news worthy of taking up someone's bandwidth with, so I figured I would post it so other Linux developers can get a hard on and masturbate to the news. Oh well back to working on kernel 2.3.0123124343254326897689375468907

  2. Super! by CommieBozo · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Unsophisticated" people being paid twice their wages at Burger King will protect me by spotting terrorists from the privacy of their own homes!

    1. Re:Super! by rmadmin · · Score: 1

      Yeah.. great.. Its hard diverting their attention from picking their nose while at Burger King, you think they are going to have the attention span to actually sit and watch something like this, and if they do, will they actually be able to spot anything? Arg.. I can see it already.. I'll be itching my ass in public and some Burger King flunky will report me as having an Anthrax spreading device up my arse. :-9

    2. Re:Super! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I can see it already.. I'll be itching my ass in public and some Burger King flunky will report me as having an Anthrax spreading device up my arse. :-9

      I'll bet there's something far more deadly up there than Anthrax.

    3. Re:Super! by rmadmin · · Score: 1

      Like a rubber chicken? :-d

    4. Re:Super! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Staff from Goatse.cx have confirmed that a Linux powered dildo was responsible for the pictures they post on their website. Linux developers are ecstatic to find that their OS now runs on a toaster, a vacuum cleaner, tickle me elmo dolls, furbies, and now dildos.

  3. Big brother is finally here. by ollie_ob · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    This sounds a bit like online vigilantism. I'd rather not have Joe Blog watching me step out of my house...

    --
    #define ROSE any_other_name
    1. Re:Big brother is finally here. by hesiod · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > I'd rather not have Joe Blog watching me step out of my house...

      Unless you live in a nuclear power plant, or some other place where there are not supposed to be any people walking around... Read the fucking article, the cameras would be in places where there should be no peolpe, not in front of your damned house. Come on, the Gov has more important things to do than watching your every move.

    2. Re:Big brother is finally here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes we do. You keep telling them, there are no black helicopters and we never keep track of individual citizens and we never got to war without good reason and we never invade and occupy foreign countries....

    3. Re:Big brother is finally here. by Glytch · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't it make more sense to use motion detectors where there's not supposed to be any movement? It sounds like a more efficient system would be motion detector/camera pairs, and a small number of security guards who can then take a closer look when an alarm goes off to make sure they're not sending a SWAT team against a stray cat.

    4. Re:Big brother is finally here. by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't it make more sense to use motion detectors where there's not supposed to be any movement?

      I'm trying to stay reasonable, but do you know what RTFA means?

      There isn't supposed to BE any movement where these cameras are/will be. Therefore, when there is motion, it means something may be wrong.

      >It sounds like a more efficient system would be motion detector/camera pairs

      That's exactly what they are trying to do.

  4. PriceLine + Cameras = ?? by bedurndurn · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sweet, now I can bid $5 dollars / hour to watch hot co-eds in the shower instead of paying conventional webcam fees. Thank you PriceLine!

    1. Re:PriceLine + Cameras = ?? by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      All we have to do is get some sororities classified as top-secret government installations, and you've got a plan there, bub.

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    2. Re:PriceLine + Cameras = ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      All we have to do is get some sororities classified as top-secret government installations, and you've got a plan there, bub.


      Come on now! You didn't really think the U.S. government was paying $1500 USD for toilet seats, did you?
    3. Re:PriceLine + Cameras = ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i volunteer to monitor the camera in rebecca romijn's home. you never know where terrorists might strike.

  5. Rat out a stranger by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nerds with guns!
    you will respect my Authoratah

    let freedom ring!

  6. and the short training period of our TSA? by garcia · · Score: 3, Interesting

    how about the testing and short training of the TSA screeners at airports?

    You think that these people are any better at looking at Xray machines?

    1. Re:and the short training period of our TSA? by dattaway · · Score: 1

      They forgot the real training: people need to go outside and visit their neighbors, friends, and family. There's just something that watching the security cartels just won't teach us.

      Turn off the television...

    2. Re:and the short training period of our TSA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In my neighborhood, going outside and visiting the neighbors is a good way to get killed.

      Cheers!

    3. Re:and the short training period of our TSA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually to pass the TSA screener test you have to be quite good at detecting items in the x-ray machines. I saw people that worked as a screener for over 10 years fail miserably at it.

    4. Re:and the short training period of our TSA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      propz to detroit motherfuckaz!

    5. Re:and the short training period of our TSA? by garcia · · Score: 1

      you're wrong. I passed the test w/o issue and I had never seen an Xray machine in my life.

    6. Re:and the short training period of our TSA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats why there was about 35% passing rate average for the sites? Maybe you were just more talented.

  7. look by Bombah · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Looks lika a good way to see what is available for theft on those locations.

  8. Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by jj_johny · · Score: 4, Insightful
    So instead of asking people to go back to simple things like know how your neighbors are, sit outside on the stoop and other local things, they are going to ask some Barney Fife wannabe to look at random cameras. Thanks and count me out.

    sig globally, act locally

    1. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Migrant+Programmer · · Score: 2, Informative

      RTFA, people. The proposal is to install these cameras along the perimiter of sensitive facilities like power plants, etc. If the camera sees a change from one snapshot to the next, the images get checked by Barney Fife wannabes.

      It has nothing to do with watching you in your house, or in your neighbourhood. It has nothing to do with people watching random cameras. I agree that it opens the door wider for 1984ish stuff, but it's not going nearly that far. These are hardly even 'public' places, they are places that the public should not be!

      A DOS attack on this system would be interesting. What if a bunch of people coordinated to sneak toward the cameras at a whole bunch of different sites, then run away?

    2. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by bedurndurn · · Score: 1
      A DOS attack on this system would be interesting. What if a bunch of people coordinated to sneak toward the cameras at a whole bunch of different sites, then run away?

      Well maybe if Microsoft didn't actively work to destroy the open source camera software with hot grits in soviet russia this wouldn't be a problem.

      Seriously though, you expect us to read before posting things? :-)
    3. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by hesiod · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > RTFA, people. [...] perimiter of sensitive facilities like power plants,

      Finally, someone who can READ!!! But seriously, it is obvious that you RTFA yourself, but while I was R-ing TFA (hehe) I immediately knew that no one else would and the majority of posts would be "I don't want some schmoe watching me in the bathtub."
      Maybe the country's problem isn't terrorism, but ignorance & stupidity. Actually, Brash Ignorance mioght be a better phrase.

    4. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      RSFH (Read Some Fucking History). Only in sensitive areas, yes. First that's the perimeter of the power plant. Then the road leading to the power plant is declared sensitive. Then the roads leading to the road to the power plant ... etc. And pretty soon everything within a 100-mile radius of any government or major industrial facility -- which means just about everywhere -- is being watched 24/7, and "suspicious" activity becomes a matter of "j'accuse." The only reason the Committee for Public Safety or the Okhrana or the Cheka/NKVD/KGB or the SS never did something like this was because they didn't have the technology.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    5. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Kaki+Nix+Sain · · Score: 3, Funny
      Yeah the idea of slippery slopes is neat. First it gets used in appropriate discussions. Then it gets used when it might somewhat be related. Then it starts getting used when it only seems a little out of place. And pretty soon everyone and their mother is making up rediculous slippy slopes to use in every discussion, rendering impossible sane discussions on the pros and cons of anything.

      --

      (C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.

    6. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by MarkGriz · · Score: 1

      "And pretty soon everything within a 100-mile radius of any government or major industrial facility -- which means just about everywhere -- is being watched 24/7"

      Oh, I get it. Like in the UK?

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
    7. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that is funny. This is the first actual funny think i have read on ./ in ages

    8. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Pirogoeth · · Score: 1

      Again, if you R the FA, one person could not wreak havoc on the system. If they decided to report someone just for shits and giggles, the picture would be resent to 20 more people for confirmation. You'd have to have pre-knowledge of who those 20 were and get them in on your scam to wrongly accuse somebody of something.

      --
      Happiness is like peeing yourself. Everybody can see it but only you can feel its warmth.
    9. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by TKinias · · Score: 1

      scripsit Daniel Dvorkin:

      and "suspicious" activity becomes a matter of "j'accuse."

      ``J'accuse'' is a rather strange term to use in this context. That was the title of Émile Zola's ``lettre au Président de la République'' accusing the army of a coverup in the Dreyfus affair (1899 IIRC). Dreyfus had been set up and convicted of espionage for Germany because he was a Jew. The point is that Zola was denouncing (at the cost of a libel conviction and possible imprisonment) the abuse of state power -- and in particular, the abuse of ``homeland security'' laws to persecute a Jew.

      What Zola was denouncing in ``J'accuse'' is very much what I fear with this sort of thing. The raving anti-Semites in fin-de-siècle France were very willing to believe that any Jew in the army must really be a German spy. Imagine a bunch of these guys sitting in a fin-de-siècle cybercafé (this is a thought exercise, OK?) calling up the gendarmes every time they see a Jew somewhere they think a Jew oughtn't be.

      Now imagine Rufus in Arkansas getting on line to make sure no nonwhite people do anything suspicious (like breathe) in the vicinity of a powerplant.

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
    10. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now imagine Rufus in Arkansas getting on line to make sure no nonwhite people do anything suspicious (like breathe) in the vicinity of a powerplant.


      After several Rufus false alarms his supervisor would get an earful about deploying security in more cost a effective manner. Supervisor would subsequently be told to get his hick employee in line with proper procedure or get rid of the moron.

    11. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love you!

    12. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      IIRC, "j'accuse" first gained its cultural resonance during the Reign of Terror -- the idea was that all someone had to do was point a finger at a neighbor he didn't like, say "j'accuse," and the poor sucker was off to the guillotine. That's certainly the context I had in mind, anyway.

      My guess is that Zola was using it ironically, but I don't know for sure.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    13. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      And if his supervisor is a hick?

      And if HIS supervisor is a hick?

      And if HIS supervisor is J. Edgar Hoover - or John Ashcroft?

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    14. Re:Wow and now we have a nation of lurkers by TKinias · · Score: 1

      scripsit Daniel Dvorkin:

      My guess is that Zola was using it ironically, but I don't know for sure.

      Here is what he actually said, inter alia (my quick-and-dirty translation):

      I accuse Lieutenant-Colonel du Paty de Clam of having been the diabolic worker of the judicial error [the conviction of Dreyfus], unwittingly, I would like to think, and of having since defended his nefarious work for three years by the craziest and guiltiest machinations.

      I accuse General Mercier of being rendered complicit, at least by weakness of spirit, in the one of the greatest iniquities of the century.

      I accuse General Billot of having had in his hands certain proof of the innocence of Dreyfus and of having suppressed it, of having rendered himself guilty of the crime of wronging humanity and justice, for a political end and to save a compromised headquarters. . . .

      The full text is on line, BTW.

      He certainly was naming names, yes, but I have never heard it said that he was evoking (ironically or otherwise) the memory of the Terror. His tone overall is not very ironic; it is more one of moral outrage.

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
  9. oh boy by Mr2cents · · Score: 0, Insightful

    this is sooo 1984..

    --
    "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
    1. Re:oh boy by mattgarnsey · · Score: 2, Funny

      unsophisticated users, eh?

      little brothers are watching you...

    2. Re:oh boy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's just boring
      why don't you start an other civil war right now
      would be fun to watch =))))

    3. Re:oh boy by glesga_kiss · · Score: 4, Interesting
      "There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment. How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. But at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever they wanted to. You had to live -- did live, from habit that became instinct -- in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement scrutinized. "

      1984, George Orwell. (on-line version)

      What are the odds on them starting to recruit children from the schools first...?

    4. Re:oh boy by gallen1234 · · Score: 1

      This is sooo 1984 because you didn't read the article. Monitoring the perimeter of a nuclear facility is wildly different from a camera in your bedroom. People monitoring airport runways is wildly different from Thought Police watching you in bed at night.

    5. Re:oh boy by cgenman · · Score: 1

      "You had to live -- did live, from habit that became instinct -- in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement scrutinized. "

      Actually, these cameras come equipped with Infra-red.

    6. Re:oh boy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is different. But they monitor "suspicious activities", how long until they start monitoring these in residential areas, then residences themselves, and a few years down the line we find we are living in fear of big brother.

    7. Re:oh boy by cHiphead · · Score: 1

      thats true, but later comes the 1984 society, this just sets the wheels in motion.. :(

      --

      This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    8. Re:oh boy by danro · · Score: 1

      "You had to live -- did live, from habit that became instinct -- in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement scrutinized. "

      Actually, these cameras come equipped with Infra-red.


      So, you are telling me that George Orwell was to optimistic?
      *shudder*

      --

      "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    9. Re:oh boy by Caffeine+Pill · · Score: 1

      Sounds like the life of a camgirl.

    10. Re:oh boy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look out folks, it's a Slippery Slope!

    11. Re:oh boy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *insert obligatory stupid "civil war" joke by Carlin here*

    12. Re:oh boy by Draigon · · Score: 1


      I know, this is getting out of hand!
      First these things monitor banks, then goverment facilities, then army bases, now it's going to be airports? highways? What next? My asshole?
      </sarcasm>

      Seriously people, get a grip. Being careful of Big Brother wiretapping your vocal cords and crying foul over tame ideas such as this one are two different things.

      --
      -Rabbit
  10. Sounds great by pubjames · · Score: 5, Funny

    Although many security details need to be handled carefully, it's a weird enough idea that it might actually work...

    Yes, sounds like a great idea! It could be very useful where I live. We've got new neighbours, and I think they might be muslims. They're definately foreign, anyway. I don't have the time to sit at the window all day looking for suspicious activity, so if we put a web cam up it would make it a lot easier. God Bless America!

    1. Re:Sounds great by OMG · · Score: 0

      WTF ? Why is this rated as "funny" ? This is not funny !

      The ones who have rated that comment as funny apparently have been sitting to long in front of their computers. Go out, talk to some real people. This IS how many of 'them' think.

    2. Re:Sounds great by Spellbinder · · Score: 1

      it is kind of amusing because i see his post as ironic
      and humor is sometimes a good way to deal with scary things

      --


      stop supporting microsoft with pirating their software!!!!!
    3. Re:Sounds great by pubjames · · Score: 1

      WTF ? Why is this rated as "funny" ? This is not funny!

      Well, it was meant to be. I sometimes write "This is sarcasm" at the end of my posts if I think they will be misinterpreted, but I hoped in this case it was obvious that I was joking.

    4. Re:Sounds great by gujo-odori · · Score: 1
      This IS how many of 'them' think.


      Umm, yes, that's why it's funny. It's called satire, perhaps you've heard of it?

    5. Re:Sounds great by Beautyon · · Score: 1

      Amen pubjames.

      Lets see: "it might actually work"

      It's not monday morning
      It's not April 1

      hmmmmmm must be the drugs!

      --
      ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
    6. Re:Sounds great by KjetilK · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and Terry Jones would get really impatient with his neighbors! ;-)

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    7. Re:Sounds great by TKinias · · Score: 1

      scripsit pubjames:

      WTF ? Why is this rated as "funny" ? This is not funny!

      Well, it was meant to be. I sometimes write "This is sarcasm" at the end of my posts if I think they will be misinterpreted, but I hoped in this case it was obvious that I was joking.

      People in this country (i.e., the U.S. of A.) really say such things in dead earnest. That's why, on one level, there's absolutely nothing funny about it. On the other hand, the edge that gives such humor can heighten its impact.

      When you employ such humor, you have to be prepared for the possibility that it will hit too close to home for some people.

      I've had family members detained by redneck cops because they ``looked foreign'' -- and that was before the Ashcroft régime...

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
    8. Re:Sounds great by diodeus · · Score: 1

      This relefects a WIRED article(http://www.wired.com/wired/scenarios/globa l.html) entitled Global Neighbourhood Watch about 5 years ago.

  11. Cue large amounts of lawsuits by James_Duncan8181 · · Score: 1, Funny
    ...against voyeurs
    ...against stalkers
    ...for false allegations made by watchers
    ...by Logitech et. al. as they realise *noone wants a cam any more

    I mean come on. Is this meant to be a satire comparing the modern state to Orwell's 1984 (also with monitored cams in the home) or have things really become that bizarrely stupid?

    Criminal guide to avoiding measure (sorry if this is too subversive):
    Step 1: Don't make evil plans near a webcam or mike.
    Step 2: Don't perform evil plans without mask if near said webcams.
    Step 2: Profit! from misdeeds.

    If you use this guide while copying music, does this mean I have broken the DMCA?

    --
    "To any truly impartial person, it would be obvious that I am right."
    1. Re:Cue large amounts of lawsuits by miTMan · · Score: 0

      I agree with what you said, but this is no time to be dancing the 2-Step.

    2. Re:Cue large amounts of lawsuits by nolife · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...for false allegations made by watchers

      Actually I believe this..

      I have the ability and software to hook my police scanner to my computer and do VOX recording (actually nothing tricky, I plugged the scanner headphone jack into the line-in on the computer and found some freeware VOX software that will use any Windows installed codec for compression on the fly). Anyway.. During the sniper scare in DC last year I happened to catch a few of the incedents. I learned a lot about human nature listening to these recordings. You would not believe how many people were calling 911 with incedents of white vans cutting people off, speeding, driving erratic, reckless and suspicious after a shooting incedent. For those that do not live in this area, the police basically shut down every highway, exit, and bypass when these shootings happened and it basically shut down the Washington/Baltimore/Northern VA area everytime looking for a white van. It seems that every white van in the peoples eyes was doing something "wrong". Well in northern VA there are thousands and thousands of white vans, it is a booming contruction market here and they are everywhere. Human nature lead those that called to not see things as they really were but tainted by the hype of these crazy white vans, they were absolutely sure they had found the snipers and would stretch the truth to ensure they were heard by the police. IMHO, this was a major reason why it took so long to actually find the real snipers, everyone was so preoccupied with the white vans they saw nothing else that mattered, it turned out to be an old Chevy Impala. I do not believe the average person could monitor cameras or be in charge of determining security risks without too many false alarms. You can only cry wolf so many times.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    3. Re:Cue large amounts of lawsuits by Eccles · · Score: 1

      What lawsuits? I'm not a Peeping Tom, I'm a patriot!

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    4. Re:Cue large amounts of lawsuits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's not a MP3, then the RIAA won't care. btw, If you have 10 mp3's, then x 2 billion people, oh my lord, that's a lot of piracy and lost sales.

  12. reality TV by oooooops · · Score: 2, Funny

    so basically he's going to have the Reatlity TV channel online and you can win fun prizes at home by spotting suspicious activity ...

    1. Re:reality TV by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      If they paid bounties for spotting suspicious activities, people would try to create such activity themselves in order to report it. Like how offering bounties for killing pest creatures can encourage people to farm them.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    2. Re:reality TV by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Just make the reward smaller then (and contingent upon) the fines these people pay.

  13. Moderation system by maharg · · Score: 5, Funny

    I can see it now

    +5: Suspicious

    --

    $ strings FTP.EXE | grep Copyright
    @(#) Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.
    1. Re:Moderation system by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      I guess that would make the karma whores pretty dangerous...

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    2. Re:Moderation system by shut_up_man · · Score: 1

      and then of course...

      +10: Boobies

  14. moron becoming self-deleting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the wons who need to be in the wwwide focus lens here, are the wons whoAre peddling the 'protection'.

    firing blindly into the crowd, & demanding applause.

    this is what you wanted?

    1. Re:moron becoming self-deleting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it is, actually.

  15. Joe Blog won't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Joe Blog thinks the world cares about him, that's why he blogs, right? If someone pays him to look at someone else his whole world will collapse. He won't be the very center of the whole universe any more!

    Instead, you need to worry about Joe Fetishist.

    But it still won't matter, as the diagram I've drawn below shows:

    LLLLLLLLL
    LLLLLLLLL
    LLL**LLLL
    LLL**LLLL
    LLLL LLLLL

    * - camera window
    L - p0rn window

    Note that the p0rn window is on top of the camera window, which is only shown for the relative size.

  16. So we're counting on 'unsophisticated users'? by Pop+n'+Fresh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Forgive my ambivalence about having 'unsophisticated users' watching a webcam, trying to outsmart and detect people who have been training in the desert for the past 5 years on how to AVOID being detected.

    --
    *This page intentionally left pointless*
    1. Re:So we're counting on 'unsophisticated users'? by fobbman · · Score: 1

      "Unsophisticated users" is just a polite term for "loser who has nothing better to do".

      Oh maybe it's that "sophisticated users" have something better to do with their time?

    2. Re:So we're counting on 'unsophisticated users'? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > 'unsophisticated users' watching [...] people who have been training in the desert for the past 5 years on how to AVOID being detected.

      Well, for one, if they are so good at being undetected, they will never get viewed. RTFA, images will only be sent if there is a change from the previous one. That image then gets sent to at least 3 people, 10 if it looks slightly suspicious. It's not just some luser staring at a single camera feed all day.

    3. Re:So we're counting on 'unsophisticated users'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Watch out for those fremen

  17. Excellent! by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 0, Funny

    Now I'm just need to figure out a way to justify monitoring the sorority bathrooms for suspicious activity, then I'll sign up for watching yanks.

    --

    Stop the brainwash

  18. Homeland security already fading by KD7JZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I just heard that they are laying off a bunch of TSA screeners in our state. Americans are very reactionary. My father talks about how "9/11 changed everything". Time rolls on, eventually we will get complacent/get back to normal (depending on your point of view).

    1. Re:Homeland security already fading by Zirnike · · Score: 1
      "Time rolls on, eventually we will get complacent/get back to normal"

      Except that the politicians will have a new tool in getting people to accept more restrictions on their freedom.

      --
      I'm not shy, I'm stalking my prey
    2. Re:Homeland security already fading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And forget all about the laws enacted....
      in the name of freedom.

  19. It's not 1984... by Richardsonke1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't know where everyone is getting these crazy fears that it's 1984 playing out in real life. These cameras are protecting the private or secure public areas. We're talking about power plants and dams here. No one that wants their privacy needs to be in these places. I mean, its not like they're going to put one up in the middle of town square. That would defeat the purpose entirely. The picture would change every five seconds, so someone would have to LOOK at it every five seconds, much less find someone on there who might be a terroist.

    I agree with the poster that it is so crazy that it might work. The only thing that i doubt is that they're going to pay $10/hour for people to watch this. That's a very good salary, and i wouldn't mind doing it for that much.

    --
    "Men lie."
    "Yeah, about sleeping with other women, but never about bioluminescent plankton."
    -Dan Brown
    1. Re:It's not 1984... by jwjcmw · · Score: 1

      My guess is that the $10/hour is only good when you actually get sent t picture to analyze. According to the article, no one is going to actually be sitting watching the images come by in real time, that is all automated. Then when you get sent a picture, the clock probably starts running. No terrorists, no dough. You would probably make more money linking to some books about terrorism on Amazon.

    2. Re:It's not 1984... by Beautyon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      These cameras are protecting the private or secure public areas.

      Cameras dont protect anything. The collect "evidence". And unless the response time is around 60 seconds, no matter how many people are watching remotely, not a single act of sabotage will be prevented by the presence of a CCTV camera, no matter who is behind it.

      The "security" industry in this case is a vile parasite, feeding off of the fear of crime and sabotage. It would be far better to spend time fixing the root causes than putting cameras on everything.

      But you know this.

      --
      ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
    3. Re:It's not 1984... by Stephenmg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree, the camaras in stores dont seem to stop the shop lifters, they could care less. Do they actually think a terroist is going to care about a camara that someone "might" be paying attention at any given time.

    4. Re:It's not 1984... by TGK · · Score: 1

      Well at least one of them won't say anything about what they see......

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    5. Re:It's not 1984... by Spellbinder · · Score: 1

      the cameras are set up due these crazy fears

      --


      stop supporting microsoft with pirating their software!!!!!
    6. Re:It's not 1984... by |nion| · · Score: 1

      First, monitoring systems ENABLE response - the intent here is to provide additional protection to special facilities (as indicated in posts above.)

      Second, the types of facilities that are indicated typically have their own indigenous security detachment.

      Just a thought (or two.)

    7. Re:It's not 1984... by Beautyon · · Score: 1
      ...the intent here is to provide additional protection ..

      People remotely monitoring will not provide "additional protection" thats just nonsense. If a place is that important, they should have armed sucurity 24-7.

      ...have their own indigenous security detachment....

      Making the whole idea redundant. Now, why would someone put forward the idea of creating a scalable system where the populattion becomes the eyes and ears of the state for cash? Can you say "TIPS2".

      I dont even have to mention the STASI do I?

      --
      ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
    8. Re:It's not 1984... by dpbsmith · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The PROPOSED use of the system seems reasonable enough.

      But if it works, what do you think the next applications of the technology are likely to be?

      And, of course, the implications of the "piecework" model are a little chilling.

      The article says that the "pay for this part-time work would be $8 to $10 an hour" but there's no reason why it would have to stay at that level, why it would have to remain part-time, or why the work would necessarily be given to Americans. I can easily see a world in which companies use this kind of technology to perform constant surveillance on their employees--and the surveillance piecework would be done overseas where the labor rates are lowest.

    9. Re:It's not 1984... by brakk · · Score: 1

      I agree, cameras aren't going to prevent a suicide bomber. Why would he care if someone saw him on camera. He's already in heaven with his 42 virgins. In fact, I think he would get some satisfaction in having his last moments on earth videotaped and seek out these places that are being filmed.

      I also agree that the "security" industry is only looking to profit from this, and just think about how much they can profit selling these videos to news stations if they DO manage to capture something on camera.

      And, this may start out just being at "power plants and dams", but once it's accepted there, what's going to prevent them from adding it to someplace a little more public, then a little more public.

    10. Re:It's not 1984... by ebuck · · Score: 1

      I have to be so conservative, but the technique that is currently in use is probably much more effective.

      When I enter power facilities in Mexico, there are always plenty of friendly guards on the ground and in towers carrying around machine guns. Somehow, I find this to be much more effective than webcams.

    11. Re:It's not 1984... by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      Deterrence is a form prevention. Not every saboteur is going to be a suicide bomber; some will wish to commit their acts and get away. Evidence is a problem for these people.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    12. Re:It's not 1984... by |nion| · · Score: 1
      ...If a place is that important, they should have armed sucurity 24-7...

      The above was addressed by the second point in my comment.

      ...Making the whole idea redundant. Now, why would someone put forward the idea of creating a scalable system where the populattion becomes the eyes and ears of the state for cash? Can you say "TIPS2"...

      The intent was not for the "population" to become the eyes and ears of the state, but for the state to employ members of the pop to look at flaged images or feeds that require human intervention - probably the "flagging" is done by a system similar to TIPS2 (assuming you're talking about some Imaging Processing system.)

      Is the scale of what he's talking about a bit silly, probably; would it be better for the companies who will theoretically (according to the article) "absorb the cost, and happily" provide their own version within their established security force, probably.

      The point is and was that your original post regarding the purpose of cameras - "evidence" collection - and the required response time for security personnel was inaccurate.

    13. Re:It's not 1984... by warloch71 · · Score: 1

      I may not be 1984, but it's going straight to Babylon 5. In that serie, some characters are paid 30 bucks a monthy just to wear the Ministry of Peace badge on their arm. There's definitelly no problem doing that for sure. Then slowly, they are asked little things, like reporting little suspicious activities. Here and there. Nothing major. Then they awake one morning and they live in a fascist society.

    14. Re:It's not 1984... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Cameras dont protect anything. They collect "evidence".

      You know, you make a very strong point. I can't think of a way that a system like this would have prevented 9/11.


      Cameras in the airport? No help, the terrorists got through security screeners who were there, in person. Cameras on the plane? No, we would have treated it like a hijacking, and would have tried to talk them down.


      Of course, 9/11 isn't the only type of terrorism, but I think your point is still valid. Cameras would have been very helpful in reconstructing exactly what happened, but they wouldn't have prevented it.

    15. Re:It's not 1984... by Beautyon · · Score: 1

      some will wish to commit their acts and get away.

      Ummm what -=planet=- have you been living on for the last 20 years?

      The guys that count all want to die not live. This is why the rule books are being thrown out all over the world. No camera, Biometric Passport, ID card or pat down in an airport will stop them. All of these fake "security" responses are simply a gold rush land grab by the Shlumbergers of this world.

      Come on!

      --
      ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
    16. Re:It's not 1984... by walrus-zero · · Score: 1

      Instead of spending extremely large sums of money on setting up such an experimental system and paying 'unsophisticated' people $10/hour for a job they we cant even be sure they are doing correctly (whos going to monitor the monitors). Why not just train and employ more sercurity guards to work in these areas.

      If there were sercurity cameras on the planes involved in 9-11 we would have being able to see what happened onboard before they crashed into the WTC and pentagon. If there were sercurity guards/air marshalls on the planes we would be hearing about the thwarted terrorist attacks on WTC and the pentagon .

    17. Re:It's not 1984... by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      TIPS is a program that encourages US citizens to spy on each other and report anything "suspicious". Saying "TIPS2" was just the poster suggesting that, by creating a system like this, is opening the way for a FUTURE expantion of TIPS, where everybody spys on everybody else with cameras, and reports to the state.

      "Earth" by David Brin had some of this. All of the retired people down in Florida had nothing better to do than record everyone and report EVERYTHING to the police. You couldn't walk down the street with 10-20 people taping you.

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    18. Re:It's not 1984... by Mac+Degger · · Score: 1

      No, but have you noticed that dams are damn impressive? I'd like to go there as a tourist and not be watched while I enjoy the view.

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
  20. Re:Sigh.. by Dashmon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What? That's crazed - you're actually saying that te right to privacy is limited by your property. By your reasoning, a homeless man doesn't have any right to privacy - after all, he's always outside his own home - he doesn't have one, but he's just as human as we are, that's what it's about. Privacy is a right, and it means that noone may force you to reveal stuff you want to keep hidden, if its none of their bussiness. The point of a right like this is that it *is* your right, no matter what. The only question here is if placing cameras is an actual violation of that right.

  21. Helpdesk Warriors! by Sirch · · Score: 4, Funny

    I can see all the arguments for and against this system, and while it is obviously well-intentioned, I find it a bit disturbing. It's all well and good sticking security cameras around the place and putting trained security individuals in charge of watching them, but this sounds like a helpdesk thing - they get a small amount of "training" and then they're released out into the real world, with a wizard to help them.

    "Is there a person on the camera?" Yes

    "Are the person's eyes looking shifty?" Yes

    "Is this person wearing all black?" Yes

    "Is the person carrying something?" Yes

    "Alert the authorities that a Muslim individual is walking around in the local supermarket carrying military-grade C4 explosives! Query the man through the loudspeaker. Don't believe him if he says he's doing his shopping! Don't accept any other explanations he gives! You are ALWAYS right, and even if you aren't, this wizard IS!"

    Orwellian nightmare?

    1. Re:Helpdesk Warriors! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      ... carrying military-grade C4 explosives...

      As opposed the C4 Lite for use in home and office?

  22. how? by kipsate · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And exactly how could a million camera's have prevented the september 11 terrorist attacks?

    --
    My karma ran over your dogma
    1. Re:how? by Richardsonke1 · · Score: 1

      The idea is, although they may be wrong, that beacuse of the tightness of security at airports now, terrorst would be looking at other targets. No long would people let someone hi-jack their plane, because they know that there is no way down without the hi-jacker dead. The hi-jackers on 9-11 played on the fact that the idea of the US govn't was to try to talk people down, instead of shooting them down, etc. So, no, it would not stop another attack with aircraft, but it could stop an attack on other places, like power plants and dams.

      --
      "Men lie."
      "Yeah, about sleeping with other women, but never about bioluminescent plankton."
      -Dan Brown
    2. Re:how? by GigsVT · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No long would people let someone hi-jack their plane

      You mean like all those hijacked planes recently that landed in cuba?

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    3. Re:how? by Halloween+Jack · · Score: 1

      It's not about preventing the last terrorist attack, obviously. 9/11 happened because no one was watching for it. Why would any terrorist worry about getting boxcutters past airport security now when they could dump an assload of ricin into a big city's reservoir and watch hundreds of thousands of people croak?

      --
      I looked into the abyss, and the abyss looked into me--and we both winked.
    4. Re:how? by platypus · · Score: 1

      Why would any terrorist worry about getting boxcutters past airport security now when they could dump an assload of ricin into a big city's reservoir and watch hundreds of thousands of people croak?

      Erm, obviously they decided to do the plane thing, although there were _no_ homeland security stuff and _no_ cameras installed at that time.

      People, face it, there are a million things dedicated evil people can do and _nothing_ can really prevent it. America is _not_ at war (at least there's no war at its home turf - ask any nation who really was hit by war), and all this stuff does is to cause mass paranoia without gaining anything.

      Oh wait, there are nice companies gaining from paranoia, but that's it.

    5. Re:how? by TGK · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Damnit, where the hell are my mod points?

      I've been trying to beet this through people's heads for years now. Terrorists don't have a problem with you specificly. They don't have this burning urge to see every last American dead... they have nothing against the individual American at all.

      They have a HUGE (and some would say legitimate) greviance against the American government and the actions of our country.

      As a tiny faction of a very poor and politicaly irrelevant society how can they incite change in that which they dislike? Unlike the wealthy westerners we associate with they can't lobby Congress or take our ambasadors out to dinner to talk things over. The money isn't there.

      So they turn to the only option open to them, violence.

      September 11 was a poorly calculated move. Look at it objectively. The targets were military (pentagon), economic (world trade center), and probably governmental (Congress? Whitehouse?). These people were protesting the actions of the American economic/political/military machine through violence.

      Remember, terrorism has an agenda. When a terorrist does something so horrific that others of his ilk around the world stand up and repudiate him (look at Quadafi's actions on Sept 11-12, 2001) he's screwed up. The objective is lost. They are trying to incite change, not wrath and revenge.

      Will we see a biological or nuclear act of terrorism in the future? The CIA says yes, and I'm inclined to agree with them. HOWEVER, it will not be from a small group seeking to affect a change in the policies of the American government. It will be an act of State Sponsored terrorism, terrorism as an act of war.

      Before you flame me, I'm not appologising for what these people did. It was horrific, terrible, and utterly wrong. Violence is not an acceptable way to make your political opinions known, and reguardless of the significance of the targets, the casualties were civilians. That's low.

      What I am saying is that these people had an objective, a goal. They failed in that goal because what they did was such an atrocity. If the US wants to avoid acts of terrorism in the future perhaps the millions we invest in homeland security should go to making life suck a little less in the distant corners of the world.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    6. Re:how? by cybercuzco · · Score: 1

      Exactly, I seem to recall that alot of cameras were watching the second aircraft plow into the WTC. That didnt seem to stop anything

      --

    7. Re:how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...a small group seeking to affect a change in the policies of the American...

      This is one of the few cases where you should use 'effect' instead of 'affect'.

  23. Old idea by MrFredBloggs · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This was mooted at least 6 years ago. In the incarnation I heard, people swapped details with people in another time zone, so that while one person was asleep/at work, someone else in another country could occasionally check a webcam image in the corner of their screen. The two people need not know each others name or exact location, if they were worried that the person watching would take advantage of knowing when the watched person was home.

  24. what about watching hostile nations or hotspots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about watching hostile nations or hotspots?

    I dont think it's practical though for various reasons, and the credibility rating system would be a pain to come up with reliably.

  25. Additions by Joe+U · · Score: 1

    Add on the ability for anyone with a camera cell phone to send messages and pictures up to the security system as well, think of all the possibilities!

  26. Sounds dangerous by JorenDahn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Seems quite worrisome to me... There's a great potential for abuse when dealing with this many people on this scale. And it also could provide easier access to sensitive information for terrorists. The problem with terrorists is that they can pass as normal citizens. So who's to say that they won't sneak themselves in to these programs to give themselves access to these areas?

    --
    Blatant self-promotion: Jerek.net
  27. The obvious. by supabeast! · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This will work for about five minutes, after which lists of every camera location will have been posted online.

    1. Re:The obvious. by TheFrood · · Score: 1

      This will work for about five minutes, after which lists of every camera location will have been posted online.

      RTFA. The cameras will be placed at likely terrorist targets, like chemical plants, airports and reservoirs. Not surprisingly, these places tend to already have security, so it's not going to be a particularly big revelation that there are cameras there as well. And since these will be big rugged outdoor webcams (again, RTFA), they'll be pretty easily visible regardless.

      TheFrood

      --
      If you say "I'll probably get modded down for this..." then I will mod you down.
  28. Stupid idea by kinnell · · Score: 1

    $8-$10 per hour to sit at home and wait for a web-cam shot to analyse? How do they know whether the watchers are watching the web-cams or just reading slashdot? Could you really sell something like this to an insurance company as a security measure, when there's no real way of ensuring that the system is working reliably?

    --
    If I seem short sighted, it is because I stand on the shoulders of midgets
    1. Re:Stupid idea by British · · Score: 1, Funny

      $8-$10 per hour to sit at home and wait for a web-cam shot to analyse?

      Ha in S0viet Jennicam, you pay 8-10$ to watch webcam!

    2. Re:Stupid idea by EvilBudMan · · Score: 2

      --when there's no real way of ensuring that the system is working reliably?--

      What about a webcam on the watchers machine. Someone would be watching the wather to determine if they are doing there job.

      Scary stuff. These things can't work in a free sociatey. Pol Pot would have loved this idea.

  29. Re:Sigh.. by BilldaCat · · Score: 0

    Well, the point is, you are wrong. The homeless man is in a 'public' place, he has no expectation to privacy.

    --
    BilldaCat
  30. Sounds familiar by drjoe1e6 · · Score: 1

    Looks like we are getting closer to David Brin's Transparent Society.

    --Joe

    --
    Lose = not win ...... Loose = not tight
  31. Everything old is new again by watchful.babbler · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I'm unaccountably reminded of the "red scare" of the 1950s, when ordinary people had the power (and often the incentive) to turn in their neighbors and co-workers for the smallest of reasons: the recently-released transcripts of the McCarthy hearings include one factory worker who was monitored by the FBI because his shop foreman noticed him reading a library book on Siberia.

    Naturally, it's not the monitoring of restricted areas that I fear so much as the next step. Government expanding to fill all adjacent spaces, I can't help but believe that the next iteration of that technology would be to begin monitoring public areas for suspicious behavior. Sed quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

    --
    "Freedom is kind of a hobby with me, and I have disposable income that I'll spend to find out how to get people more."
  32. Re:Sigh.. by Seth+Finklestein · · Score: 1, Funny

    You know, I was just talking about this over coffee with my good friend Bill Brown. He runs a tour of New York's security cameras, so that protesters such as myself can easily point out the cameras and mock them. I've been going on this tour every week with Dr. Brown, and every time he has even more incisive insights.

    As a very famous cybersecurity researcher, I feel that I am highly qualified to talk about Homeland Security. My deep knowledge of computers -- which came with no formal training, just my own intelligence -- can easily be applied to solving real-world security problems. My award-winning research has led to landmark decisions in the field of security.

    I have the right to control every aspect of my identity, both in "interspace" and in "meat-space." When someone takes a picture of me in the real world, I have every right to walk up to that person and shout at them until they agree to delete the picture from their "mini-hard drive card" or burn the film in front of me. I know that most of you don't have to deal with these issues on a daily basis, but of course most of you are not prominent cybersecurity researchers such as myself.

    Visit my web site -- do revisit, I've added a lot lately. And oh yeah, down with Michael Sims, who stole the Censorware Project from me as if it were candy and I were a baby! I'm not a baby.

    --
    I'm not Seth Finkelstein. I still speak the truth.
  33. Not a patentable process, is it? by captainfugacity · · Score: 2, Funny

    Previous work by George Orwell supercedes the patent on this process, right? Thank god, we don't have to worry about seeing this topic as a privacy AND copyright issue.

  34. Re:Sigh.. by inajar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My concerns aren't privacy, I'm more worried about letting the average person run basically run this system. This smacks of 1930s/40s Germany, where you were asked to basically spy on your neighbor. It smacks of the Red Scare here in the US, where, again, you were basically asked to spy on your own neighbor. The list goes on and on.

    I'm all for securing potential targets but I don't think that letting the average person run the system is a great idea. Think back a few months to an incident in Florida where three medical students on their way to their new residencies were chased down and then detained on the side of the highway for nearly 24 hours. This was all because one ignorant woman saw three Middle Easter-looking men having a private discussion in a restaraunt. I'm afraid that this system of cameras will only increase instances like this.

  35. Next thing you'll know by xutopia · · Score: 1

    America's most violent videos -- "And the first prize, for all the beautiful gore, goes to John Doe for killing his boss with a rusty spoon!"

    1. Re:Next thing you'll know by multipartmixed · · Score: 1

      No, it goes to Mrs. White, in the kitchen, with the candlestick.

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
  36. Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Nothing happens most of the time. Watching it will be boring ... maybe if the system was assisted by motion detection software and/or AI that would help. But then how would you deal with suspcious activity in public areas .. The AI cant be that perfect.

    I think this will be too boring and most people will fall asleep watching the crap, and/or issue false alarms too often.

    1. Re:Problem by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > maybe if the system was assisted by motion detection

      Oh my god, you are fucking stupid. IT IS ASSISTED BY MOTION DETECTION, dolt.

      The only thing that gets sent is an image, if it changes sufficiently from the image 10 seconds before it. Guess what that's called? MOTION DETECTION. Stupidity amazes me sometimes.

  37. Suspicious? by Stiletto · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Whenever I read about "looking for suspicious activity" I cringe at what my neighbors might be suspicious of. We (at least in the USA) are trained from birth to conform and not stand out. We are taught in school to ridicule and/or fear people who are different--people who look different or behave different. Some of the folks I live near are afraid of people who wear black. Others don't like seeing people walking home after midnight. The problem with letting joe sixpack look for "suspicious" people is that anyone who does anything besides sleeping, going to work and shopping, will inevitably be considered suspicious by someone.

    The USA has become a nation of freightened sheep, and the general public is happy to lock people away who don't totally conform to the norm (please compare our imprisonment rates for non-violent offenders against the rest of the world).

    Would you want your neighbors to watch you and decide whether you're doing something "suspicious"? How about letting your business competitor decide? How about that homeowner's association nazi who thinks your yard gnome is too big?

    1. Re:Suspicious? by morcheeba · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hey, you were suspiciously absent from this year's Loyalty Day. Surely you knew about this, or else we'd have to send you to the "Our Documents" re-education class. See ya next year!

    2. Re:Suspicious? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > We are taught in school to ridicule and/or fear people who are different

      If that is the case, I suggest you send your children to a different school, because no one in my family, or anyone I have ever met, AFAIK has ever been taught anything like that in school. Or, perhaps, are you lieing to make your point seem more valuable.

    3. Re:Suspicious? by sandbagger · · Score: 1

      There was a short story about a pedestrian, who, one evening, decided to forgoe his television. He went out for a walk and took in the air of suburbian night, listened to the wind in the trees, the insects, and noticed the omnipresent blue glow of the televisions in everyone's windows.

      The police came and arrested him because he couldn't explain what he was doing.

      What people do that is "strange" is relative. The people acting sane are often the stand-outs.

      --
      ---- The above post was generated by the Turing Institute. Maybe.
    4. Re:Suspicious? by Stiletto · · Score: 1


      Clearly you have never been inside a public school during class hours within the past, say, 10 years.

      Of course there are no classes like "Discrimination 101" or "How to Harass the Weird Kids" but I can assure you that attitudes of hate, fear, and ridicule directed towards non-conformists and oddballs are widespread and actually encouraged (through toleration and turning a blind eye) by teachers and school administrations across the country.

    5. Re:Suspicious? by delcielo · · Score: 1

      There is almost enought hyperbole in that post to make it a campaign speech.

      You and I are the general public. It's easy to dismiss the rest of the population as being ridiculous simpletons (and sure, some will be) because things haven't gone the way you'd like them to. But the reality is that you've just spoken about yourself and about me, my family, neighbors, friends, etc. I don't remember ever being taught that people who look or behave differently than I are to be feared and/or ridiculed. In fact, my whole life has been filled with teachers/parents/clerics/etc. who have said that such behavior is wrong. I've certainly never been taught in school to ridicule other people.

      Those things are taught by us to eachother in ways much more subtle. If you, for instance, ridicule me and everyone I know by calling us frightened sheep, don't be surprised by our general disdain for you. It will not simply be a matter of stupid society persecuting you.

      You have, ironically, just perpetuated the very thing you decried.

      --
      Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
    6. Re:Suspicious? by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > ridicule directed towards non-conformists and oddballs are widespread and actually encouraged (through toleration and turning a blind eye) by teachers and school administrations across the country.

      Like I said before, I suggest you go somewhere else. And just because YOUR part of the country is like that doesn't mean that everyone's is. I went to school in West Virginia. If someone didn't know ohterwise, they might think that would be one of the most likely places to find severe discrimination. I found very little, except for the old, "mature" people (read: crabby old bats who'll find anything to complain about) who think that just because they are old they are right.

      What may be the problem here is that we are considering two different levels of hate/fear/ridicule. If someone is different because they choose to be different, I have every right to treat them differently, but only so much as their chosen differences go. If I think spikey green hair is stupid looking, I will say so. That doesn't mean I'll claim they are any less of a person, just that they made a stupid mistake. I use that example because I have a lot of close Punk friends and I know they aren't really treated differently, although a few of them think that they are.

    7. Re:Suspicious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Were you not just accusing someone of being a stupid dolt because he did not quite grasp the concept of motion detection? But hey, you went to school in west Virginia where they teach you be tolerant and understanding, so you would never harass someone for being ignorant...

  38. Not worried... by Aaron_Pike · · Score: 1
    I'm not terribly worried about this, even if it does happen. Sure, there are people watching, but if you want 100% coverage, you need people to watch the watchers, and watchers watching the watcher watchers, and so on and so forth until the entire GNP is spent on watching people.

    So assuming the nation/government/culture doesn't get REALLY silly, there will always be "safe" spots, likely more so than not. So don't panic too much.

  39. Fahrenheit 451? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This sounds like just what we need. Lets create a system where every person lives in fear of everyone else, constantly watching out for communi^h^h^h terrorists among us.

    The only thing this will do is create so many false leads that law enforcement will have trouble actually finding any legitimate threat. Of course, with the Patriot act, whats to stop them from classifying anyone so accused and throwing them in prison as a material witness?

    1. Re:Fahrenheit 451? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sliiiidin' down that Slippery Slope!

  40. Big-freaking-deal by foo+fighter · · Score: 3, Interesting
    it's a weird enough idea that it might actually work...


    Wait, let me get this straight:
    1. Hook up some cameras to a network.
    2. Hire people to monitor the output of the cameras. (People who may or may not have an understanding of the technology behind the cameras and the network.)
    3. Security!

    How is this weird? This is how security camera operations have worked for half a century. The only new things here are the use of an open, instead of closed network, and cheap, instead of expensive, cameras.

    Whoopdy-freaking-doo.
    --
    obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
  41. Re:Sigh.. by BilldaCat · · Score: 1

    Oh, that I agree with. Paying Joe Blow $16k a year to monitor this stuff is ridiculous.

    --
    BilldaCat
  42. Re:Sigh.. by mark2003 · · Score: 1

    Can we not get kids involved, ask to record everything their parents and teachers do and report on anything suspicious - hey why not call it the Hitler, sorry, Bush Youth?

  43. Mass problem: blind alerts by yabHuj · · Score: 1

    Okay, who's suspicious? Depending on state even carrying automatic rifles is legal or normal.

    But what about an unusual number of orientalic-looking people gathering in a house? Having the police storm a family gathering (birthday party, wedding) always is fun, isn't it?

    OTOH the family father who carries home his grocey shoppings (a kilo sugar and herbicide every evening) is completely unsuspicious, isn't he? Homebuilding makeshift-bombs made easy.

    So: everyone is suspicious - just to be safe. And police won't know where to start digging though all those "alerts" streaming in...

  44. .. and unsophisticated people worldwide !! by maharg · · Score: 1

    Thank you for you interest

    from http://www.ushomeguard.org/coming-soon.asp

    --

    $ strings FTP.EXE | grep Copyright
    @(#) Copyright (c) 1983 The Regents of the University of California.
  45. redundant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not use the webcam and image comparison and flash the image to existing/hired security guards at the individual facility?

    Presumably all sensistive sites already hire security guards. If not, that's really stupid.

  46. In Soviet Russia... by skraps · · Score: 1, Funny

    the cameras monitor YOU!

    Oh wait, we'll have that too.

    --
    Karma: -2147483648 (Mostly affected by integer overflow)
  47. Re:Sigh.. by gallen1234 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yes, privacy depends on your location. If you're standing on a street corner in plain view of the world then I don't see how you can object to your actions being watched by the police or anyone else who happens to pass by. Are we all supposed to avert our eyes because you might want a little privacy?

  48. Almost completely pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, kids with spray paint will be scared off when the speaker yells, but people trying to poisen the drinking water won't skip a beat. They will buy a good baby monitor (or microwave, etc.) and kill the WiFi. It will happen often enough that there won't be any urgent response from the stay at home masses.

    Then drink bottled and wait for SARSII in the good old U.S.A.

    What a waste of time and money.

  49. Brings to mind a Red Dwarf scene by shockwaverider · · Score: 1

    Become a government informer
    Betray your family and friends!
    Fantastic prizes to be won!

    --
    Remember kids! Guns don't kill people - Americans kill people.
  50. There's a guy... by TrueWest175 · · Score: 1, Funny

    He's standing on the corner. No wait! He's moving. Now's he's stopped again. He keeps checking his watch! I think he's up to something. No? You're sure? Dang! OK, I'll call you back.

    --


    laugh hard, it's a long way to the bank
  51. Only spies on trespassers by frdmfghtr · · Score: 1

    Then there's the Big Brother issue. When Walker unveiled his plan earlier this year in an off-the-record talk at the fabled TED tech conference, the idea of people-scanning cameras on the Net "creeped everybody out," says one attendee. Walker thinks this is a bogus issue, since cameras will be pointed only to areas where people aren't supposed to be. "I don't see a problem with that," says Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. But Rotenberg worries about whether a future iteration of the system might include facial recognition and other features that could track ordinary people.

    And if anybody is caught on camera, it's because they are where they shouldn't be. Don't want to be on camera? Don't go where you shouldn't go!

    Yes, Virginia, it's really that simple.

    --
    Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
    1. Re:Only spies on trespassers by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 1

      Or, wear an infra-red diode on the top of your hat. That really screws with cameras.

      --
      You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
    2. Re:Only spies on trespassers by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      if there is nobody supposed to be there..

      why the need for a HUMAN to watch it????

      simple motion detector would do very well for that job(cheaper, more effective.. & etc.).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    3. Re:Only spies on trespassers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      have you ever heard of animals?

    4. Re:Only spies on trespassers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, They have already tried them at football games, the olympics and such. They tend to fail miserably, resulting in a lot of people becoming false positives.

      None of this is about terrorism anymore.

  52. A better way? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You think it would be more cost effective to have the cams do a live feed over the net and anyone could watch them. If someones sees some funky stuff goin' down they could call it in and get a reward based on the crime they just helped stop.

  53. Re:Sigh.. by Dashmon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So when I'm on the street, you have the right to know everything about me? I can walk up to you and demand to know how much money you earn, what diseases run in your familly etc.? I know you wouldn't tell me if I did that. Interesting thing is some believe that I can't do that, but that the state does have that right - a policeman should be able to walk up to you and ask what he wants to know, even when you're not suspected of anything.

    Privacy isn't something limited by your location, it's a universal right - when violated, you've violated someones personal freedom, and thats about the most important thing we have.

  54. Re:Sigh.. by BilldaCat · · Score: 0

    Yes, you certainly can. You can watch me walk up and down the street, and what the hell can I do about it? I can confront you and tell you to stop watching me, but does that mean you are obligated to? Of course not.

    --
    BilldaCat
  55. You just know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would set up several PC's on my DSL line and monitor 10 or more webcams, heck, the software would do half the work for you, and I would charge $10.00 per cam! Wahoo $100.00 bucks per hour! I can afford that large screen TV now!

    .
    .
    Oh, those "unsophisticated" people watching the cams, they will be aided by software that alerts then to check out the CHANGES in the cam viewing field, then if they think something is going on, 10 more people get to deceide if it is a bogey or a false alarm! Read the article you douchebags!

  56. Re:Sigh.. by bigberk · · Score: 2, Interesting
    My concerns aren't privacy, I'm more worried about letting the average person run basically run this system. This smacks of 1930s/40s Germany, where you were asked to basically spy on your neighbor.
    The new spy-on-your-neighbor line is already up and running (started in January 2002). Read up on TIPS... I love how it's under the "USA Freedom Corps"... oh, the delicious Orwellian irony.

    Speaking of which, browse through this essay on Orwell's 1984 to spot some familiar themes.
  57. Re:Sigh.. by Dashmon · · Score: 1

    There is a difference to watching me on a street corner, and taking away someones right to privacy when he's in a public place. When I'm outside, I know people can watch me. If I don't like that, I don't go outside - and I am outside, so that means I don't mind (and if I don't mind, my right to privacy is not violated, even though I do have less privacy) . But that doesn't mean I don't have a right to privacy when I'm outside (which is what the post I replied to said) - just because I'm standing at that corner doesn't mean you have a right to know, for instance, what I'm carrying in my right pocket (except when that's a threath to you, in which case I'm violating your freedom, and not vice-versa.

  58. Re:Sigh.. by hesiod · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    > Privacy is a right

    No it isn't. Cite the part of the constitution that says "We have the right to privacy wherever we go." Hell, find the one that even says we have any right to privacy in our own home.

  59. Re:Sigh.. by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > This smacks of 1930s/40s Germany, where you were asked to basically spy on your neighbor

    This would only be accurate if all your neighbors lived in nuclear power plants or chemicals factories. Otherwise, I can tell you didn't read the friggin article. Next time, know what you are talking about before you open your mouth.

  60. Hulk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always wondered if those Hi-rises in NY, where people walk around for others with telescopes to spy on, would be a haven (heaven?) for wireless camera "spies". "Oops, I left my camera on and walked nude in front of it, and I didn't think it was possible for people to tie into the signal."

    Speaking of wireless cameras and homeland security, does anyone have a link where I can download the latest Hulk trailer? I go to the official site and it wants to try to play it. I wanna download it then burn it to CD to take home.

  61. Re:Sigh.. by bmongar · · Score: 3, Informative

    Protection against unreasonable search is where the right to privacy is derived from, Mostly by the Warren court.

    --
    As x approaches total apathy I couldn't care less.
  62. Not INSIGHTFUL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And exactly how could a million camera's have prevented the september 11 terrorist attacks?
    "
    .
    Not the point, IF the airlines had PROPERLY responded to the hijacking scenario, as it should have in the early 1960's when hijacking came into being, then 9-11 may have not happened. Cameras would be able to tell us which stupid airline employee fucked up! Hindsight rocks! The total responsibility for 9-11 rests on the US Immigration, Department of State and the Airlines involved.

  63. Re:Sigh.. by madfgurtbn · · Score: 5, Informative

    RTFA... This system as described only sends video when it detects motion. Then once motion is detected it sends the video to three of these "unsophisticated" viewers. If they see somehting interesting, it is then sent to ten more. If there is agreement that something is worth checking out in the video, then the professionals take over.

    As described, this is only useful for moniitoring places where people rarely venture, and really shoulnd't be anyway, such as power substations and bridges in remote areas, etc.

    Looks like a pretty good system to me, at first glance.

    --
    Send lawyers, guns, and money. Dad, get me out of this.
  64. Re:Sigh.. by Dashmon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No it isn't. Cite the part of the constitution that says "We have the right to privacy wherever we go." ...

    I know this is a touchy subject for some of you out there, but:

    The Constitution isn't perfect. Which is why you can make amendments in the first place, and why in most countries, the constitution can even be altered.

    I'm not talking about your legal rights here, I'm talking about your moral rights, which are what the law should be modelled after - what is right and what isn't? Just that something isn't in the law doesn't mean it shouldn't be.

  65. Global Neighbourhood Watch (Neal Stephenson) by msmithstubbs · · Score: 1
    This sounds familiar. Author Neal Stephenson (of Snow Crash fame) talked about this idea in a Wired article and called it the Global Neighbourhood Watch.

    Here's another link:

    http://www.cfp2000.org/news/student_reports/stephe nson-waldman.html

    1. Re:Global Neighbourhood Watch (Neal Stephenson) by farrellj · · Score: 1

      I was there for the talk he gave at CFP 2000...he's a great guest speaker! You can imagine he turned a few heads, including Phil Zimmerman's!

      ttyl
      Farrell

      --
      CAN-CON 2019 - Ottawa's only book oriented Science Fiction Convention! October 18-20, Sheraton Hotel, Ottawa, Canada h
  66. not to mention... by Petronius · · Score: 1

    that sitting next to the monitor, these people's tube will most likely be tuned to FOX news or CNN.

    BREAKING NEWS: sniper driving a white van! possible terrorist!

    Great future we're promised...

    --
    there's no place like ~
  67. It's not 1984... Yet by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Its all about slow encroachment, and acceptance training, of the public.

    Once this is accepted as normal, its a smaller step to accepting mass monitoring private citizens as the norm.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  68. Hehe, naked terror by Nijika · · Score: 1

    Aren't we already doing this? Monitoring, closeley, those suspicious blonde twins with the double headed "bludgeoning device"... Right-o. Someone in the US once said (to paraphrase) "we don't need the government to curtail our rights, the citizens are doing a fine job of that already".

    --
    Luck favors the prepared, darling.
  69. Re:Sigh.. by realnowhereman · · Score: 0

    That's a damned clever webcam you've got there that knows how much money you earn, what diseases, etc, etc.

    --
    Carpe Daemon
  70. Watch out... by Demerara · · Score: 1

    Big Brethern is watching...

    --
    Backward%20compatibility%20is%20over-rated
  71. Re:Sigh.. by akadruid · · Score: 1

    Your Privacy is not just limited to who can see you.
    The homeless person can expect to be watched 24 hours a day - this is an invasion of his/her privacy but they have more fundemental problems than that. They still have the right not to have their privacy invaded further, for example their personal details should remain private.
    How about if some of the money planned set aside for this scheme in 1984 were to go to providing shelter for the homeless?
    Although in theory you have nothing to fear if you do nothing wrong, it is misuse of the system that is a problem.
    By opening the system up, you are inviting misuse of the system.

    --
    "Those who cast the votes decide nothing; those who count the votes decide everything." (attrib. Joseph Stalin)
  72. umm, Think of This Way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in light of the "big brother" posts;
    The premise of the service offered is more like this. People sign up with the service to be monitored. Examples of its use are:
    You have an eldery person who is home alone at times and you want to be alerted of any problems while you are shopping or You have an elderly person in a care home and you want to make sure they are properly cared for. You own a business and you want 24 hour video surveillance at a lower cost. etc etc. If you are busy in your own life then having extra "eyes" to watch thing on your behalf can be a valuable service. We have to await to see what the EULA will be and determine exactly what the "eyes" will be able to see. There should be a clause added in the EULA that states you cannot use the service to monitor property you do not own, rent, or otherwise pay fees to use. etc etc..

  73. moron surveillance as it applies to your .asp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/technology/AP-Inte rnet-Toilet.html

    yikes.

  74. Right to privacy by FuzzyDaddy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The thing that bothers me about the general thinking on privacy is that people have a right to privacy insofar as they have an "expectation of privacy".

    As technology progresses, this expectation is eroded. What does it mean to go to the store and buy a magazine? It used to be, it was public, but unless someone you knew saw you, no-one would now. It is possible now to track what magazines I buy (through credit cards, Bonus cards, etc. and the UPC code on the magazine), and form a database. The test of "expectation of privacy" is the same, but technology has lowered that expectation.

    You're right, in that the test of "expectation of privacy" is the current way to determine if you have a right to privacy, and this stuff happens in public view. The question is whether we need to change either the test, or our expectations, or whether we accept an ever-vanishing amount of privacy. If millimeter wave imaging became cheap (which can look through walls), would that mean I wouldn't have the expectation to have sex in my own home without being seen?

    Technology has definitely changed the picture. Privacy is no longer an issue of being seen, but also of being tracked. Just because we have lost so much privacy does not mean we can't reclaim it.

    --
    It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
    1. Re:Right to privacy by pmz · · Score: 1

      It is possible now to track what magazines I buy (through credit cards, Bonus cards, etc. and the UPC code on the magazine), and form a database.

      This is why people should think twice about entering certain search strings in Google or even what they type into Slashdot. It is pretty obvious that Slashdot articles about TIA, etc., get fewer postings than one might expect. Fear appears to be a very effective means for censorship.

  75. Short-term good, long-term evil (RANT) by Crash+Culligan · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Yes, it's another casting of that "slippery slope" problem. Whoop-de-frigging-doo.

    Yes, the article specifically mentioned pointing those cameras at places where nobody is supposed to be.

    For now.

    For years, the government has gotten around the Constitution by outsourcing its atrocities. They can't really abridge the rights of people by interrogating them here, so they let their allies do it. They're prevented from infringing the privacy of the people (but in many cases still do it), but they're fine with letting companies collect the data and then rifling through their records.

    They've made a science of preserving the illusion of freedom while making it scarcer and scarcer in real life. That's because the government's primary goal is to protect itself. The consumers^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hitizens come a distant second.

    If by some miracle the webcam idea works (and I really don't think it will, except as a psychological deterrent to attacks on soft targets), someone will suggest it gets "spread" to other places. The citizens of the nation will manage to keep themselves under tight scrutiny at the behest of the government. Can you say "worst case scenario," boys and girls?

    --
    You cannot truly appreciate Dilbert until you read it in the original Klingon.
  76. Re:Sigh.. by Dashmon · · Score: 1

    Where did I say I was against this webcam idea? It's true, when going outside, you willing let others see you, and thus, a camera isn't a problem either. But again, that doesn't mean you don't have a right to privacy, as the original post said. I am against the idea, btw, but only because of what the second replier to the original post mentioned: it's having people spy on their neighbours etc.

  77. Propaganda of the powerful will cause rejection by Cryofan · · Score: 0, Troll

    THe rich and powerful would prefer not to come under the watchful eye of the camera. Also, the business lobbies want more cheap labor via illegal aliens. THese cameras could be used to halt the flow of illegal aliens.

    This powerful interests will probably finance more anti-surveillance propaganda in order to kill such ideas.

    I am all for it. I see this country as an asset that I own jointly with the other American citizens, and just like a person who owns a business with other partners, I want to protect my asset and keep it from being used by others who do not own (unless they are tourists or business investors who bring financial assets).

    Importation of cheap illegal alien labor hurts many citizen/owners. Therefore it should be stopped. And cameras can help.

    Flame away.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:Propaganda of the powerful will cause rejection by Steve+B · · Score: 2, Funny
      I see this country as an asset that I own jointly with the other American citizens

      Well, we obviously need to beef up security, inasmuch as the existing system has clearly failed to keep out the Communists....

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  78. Other concerns by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1, Informative

    Workers at these facilities will now ALWAYS be on camera. They were on camera before, but it was just internal security cams. Now, your ugly mug is online, all the time. Yuck.

    Joe Q Public, the 'unsophisticated user', will now have the ability (and they will) to check out what Mr. Dam Inspector is doing at any particular time.

    MOVEMENT DETECTED!
    - Joe, you must evaluate this picture.
    --Damn...lookatthat...he's pickin his nose!

    MOVEMENT DETECTED!
    - Jane, you must evaluate this picture.
    --Does that guy look kind of....dark? Yes, we must send this to level 2. (even though its merely the guy who refills the Coke machine)

    MOVEMENT DETECTED!
    - Alice, you must evaluate this picture
    -- ahhh...it's that guy coming back from the bathroom again. Damn, he pees a lot. I think there's something funny going on in there. I think we need to call security.

    I know *I* wouldn't want to work in such a place.

  79. too easy by Gandalf1957 · · Score: 1

    so the terrorist organization of the day finds a bunch of kiddie hackers who break the encryption, construct a man-in-the-middle set up which either spoofs the images so all appears well or the opposite diverting attention to a bogus site......we've failed miserably so far to secure systems on nothing like this scale - this doesn't stand a chance.

  80. Polaroids to the rescue by evan1l38 · · Score: 1


    Isn't this the sort of system you can get around by taping a picture to the camera lens? Then anyone looking at the picture just sees something normal...

    --

    Evan Reynolds evanthx@hotmail.com
    Two peanuts crossed the street. One was assaulted.

  81. UK by Forkenhoppen · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's already been done in Britain, iirc. I remember seeing a short piece on a news program a while back about some poor couple who were living on a city block with a camera mounted on the pole outside. Because of where it was mounted, it had the freedom to turn to look through their windows. The piece was about how they were trying to get whomever had installed the camera to put limiters on it so the people operating the cam would stop peeping on them all the time.

    1. Re:UK by radish · · Score: 1

      Not quite the same, the images weren't piped out onto the web - it was being watched by the police and/or other operators. Now I'm not saying this is a great situation, but those watching the cameras at least should be trustworthy (of course, they may well not be in reality). Sure we have a lot of cameras over here, but the big problem I have with this plan is opening this up to the world.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  82. Terrorist. by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 0

    Your helping them by trying to subvert our security. Im forwarding your information on to TIPS.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  83. insightful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful


    That post was about as insightful as a Mike Tyson press conference.

    I'm more worried about letting the average person run basically run this system. This smacks of 1930s/40s Germany, where you were asked to basically spy on your neighbor. It smacks of the Red Scare here in the US, where, again, you were basically asked to spy on your own neighbor. The list goes on and on.


    These people would not be spying on their neighbors, they would be nothing more than work at home security guards. They are protecting specific public and commercial infrastructure.

    Unskilled airport workers go through everyone's underware, do you hear privacy activists outraged at this? Not the ones that fly.

    Think back a few months to an incident in Florida where three medical students on their way to their new residencies were chased down and then detained on the side of the highway for nearly 24 hours. This was all because one ignorant woman saw three Middle Easter-looking men having a private discussion in a restaraunt. I'm afraid that this system of cameras will only increase instances like this.

    Your appraisal if this incident exposes your ignorance on the matter. The men were purposely speaking to be overheard (their conversation was not private at that point) as part of an insanely idiotic prank with the intent to purposefully cause alarm in nearby patrons. The lady stated that she weighed her correct course of action after hearing the statements and did the obviously correct thing by alerting law enforcement.

    Should an individual have alerted authorities after hearing plans for sabotage during world war II?

    Go ahead and delude yourself into your own conclusion to this question. The correct conclusion stands dependent on its own merits.

    1. Re:insightful by inajar · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Go ahead and delude yourself into your own conclusion to this question. The correct conclusion stands dependent on its own merits.


      Yeah, thanks AC.
  84. kaching by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    X10 anyone?

  85. No, you mean Orwell's 1984 by 0123456 · · Score: 1

    In Brin's naive and silly utopia, the people would be watching the government even more than the government watched the people (after all, there are many more of us than there are of them). No-one here is talking about installing webcams in and around government buildings so that we can watch what they're doing, only installing webcams in public places so that the government can watch what we're doing.

  86. practical example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not long ago a case of robbery was solved this way, down here in Brazil. Someone was chatting at the internet with his webcam, when a thief broke into the house. The guy on the other end of the line saw what was going on, called the police, which arrived quickly and arrested the thief.

  87. conflict is needed to attract readers by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    The sheeple are easily swayed by "reporters" who need to attract readers, and so the reporters generate conflict and tension and fear....ooohhh...it's 1984!

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  88. Re:Sigh.. by shaitand · · Score: 1

    The right to privacy has been affirmed, and was essentially created by (afaik) the Supreme Court.

  89. I've got a better idea by kipple · · Score: 4, Funny

    let's put a webcam at every corner in public places, then put a sign under the webcam stating its ip address (maybe ipv6 would help).
    Now everybody with an internet connection can watch any webcam at any time.
    Since it would be impossible to know who is watching the camera that's above your head, everybody will become a good and productive dron^H^H^H^Hcitizen.

    oh, and the paranoia that would arise shortly after will be defined as anti-American: if you don't have anything to hide, you don't have to worry about anything.

    say welcome to the new Privacy era!

    ps: this is supposed to be a joke. If you don't get it, don't care about it.

    --
    -- There are two kind of sysadmins: Paranoids and Losers. (adapted from D. Bach)
    1. Re:I've got a better idea by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sounds good to me. Then maybe the judge will believe me that I really didn't go through that red light, and that the cop was lying. Then maybe I can charge my state senators with speeding, which we all know they do just as much as I do. I may have something to hide, but I don't have anything more to hide than anyone else.

      But no, I'd much rather have racist cops on every corner than cameras. I'd much rather have webcams that only corrupt politicians can view.

      "The best way to get a bad law repealed is to enforce it strictly." - Abraham Lincoln

    2. Re:I've got a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or.....

      maybe once people see that everyone else is just as screwed up as they are, they will stop giving a shit about what other people think about them.

    3. Re:I've got a better idea by number6.3 · · Score: 1

      I almost did this in my neighborhood. I live in Asbury Park, NJ, and while the area is getting "better", there are still many sections that are rough. Taking a walk anywhere after midnight is just a Bad Idea.

      Anyway, about a year or two back, we had a lot of "park and sit" traffic on our block. Sometimes it would be a Jaguar parked in front of some Section 8 housing ("Delivered Fresh Every Day!"), or some beat up heap parked in front of nowhere in partucular ("Our Quality Assurance Staff Works 'Round The Clock Testing our Product for YOU!").

      Of course, none of of the activity we could see was illegal. Just, shall we say, damn weird.

      I almost got to the point where I was going to put one of those web cameras up outside a window when the "Jaguar House" got sold and the tennants had to leave.

      If there has to be surveliance, put webcams up on street corners, post their address in a prominent spot either on the housing or in some kind of webcam white pages, and let EVERYBODY look.

    4. Re:I've got a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      let's put a webcam at every corner in public places, then put a sign under the webcam stating its ip address (maybe ipv6 would help).
      Now everybody with an internet connection can watch any webcam at any time.
      Since it would be impossible to know who is watching the camera that's above your head, everybody will become a good and productive dron^H^H^H^Hcitizen.


      I know this is supposed to be a joke, but it's not a half bad idea. As long as the cameras are only put in PUBLIC PLACES and EVERYONE HAS ACCESS TO THEM. This would only reinforce the "don't do anything you wouldn't want your mom to know about" effect about a zillion times, which in my opinion would be a good thing.

  90. In all honesty it isn't that bad... by neildiamond · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The point is putting cameras at places where normal people aren't supposed to be (nuclear power plants, chemical plants). In that context it makes more sense. Yes it is a little 1984 and could be misused.

    My big concern is that it could let potential terrorists know where the cameras are actually placed and give them details about other security measures in place. I guess that's all in how it is used.

    Anyway, after seeing the Nova documentary on how vulnerable some targets really are, a little security is better than the level we have now.

  91. Re:Sigh.. by shaitand · · Score: 1

    Indicental invasions are expected. But no, I don't think a police officer has the right to single me out follow me personally with a video camera without my consent, public or otherwise. That is harassment.

  92. For those who don't know Latin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sed quis custodiet ipsos custodes? means "Who watches the watchers?"

    1. Re:For those who don't know Latin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sed quis custodiet ipsos custodes? means "Who watches the watchers?"


      And, aside from being cool 'cause it's latin, the most significant thing about the question is that its been around for millenia, and we still don't have an answer.


      Talk about everything old being new again...

    2. Re:For those who don't know Latin... by NoData · · Score: 1

      Sed quis custodiet ipsos custodes? means "Who watches the watchers?"

      And, aside from being cool 'cause it's latin, the most significant thing about the question is that its been around for millenia, and we still don't have an answer.


      Yeah we do...the watched watch the watchers.
      This is called a representative democracy.

  93. Re:Sigh.. by NoData · · Score: 1

    Privacy is a right, and it means that noone may force you to reveal stuff you want to keep hidden, if its none of their bussiness.

    Homeland security is everyone's business, comrade.
    And it's all homeland security.

  94. Last I checked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...there were a lot of cameras at sept 11. It still happend

  95. Unmonitered cameras by cgenman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There are a few things wrong with the system as he describes it.

    First of all, trained or untrained, it would be very easy to "pass" on a security camera as a bunch of curious college kids with backpacks (full of C4). Even a well-made bear costume would be indistinguishable from the real thing on a webcam.

    Second, such a system might not have a fast enough response time. A five second window is a long time to run through a security camera. Assuming the first camera captures you, it might take 30 seconds for 3 people on the internet to recieve the image, and another 30 for the next 10 people, and 60 seconds for a person in the emergency responce headquarters to review, find, interrogate, and notify the authorities on campus. Let's assume the security responce people take 2 minutes to find these terrorists... They now have had 4 minutes to poison the water, plant a bomb, or take an opera full of people hostage.

    Third, like all motion detectors there must be an amount of accepted variance. If terrorists walked really slowly or very slowly obstructed the camera they could walk right in front of it. Being wireless, the cameras' locations would be easy to detect. If the system compared this 5 second picture to one 10 minutes ago they could detect such changes, but such a system would consume large amounts of resources to store those backphotos. This problem is sticky but not unsolvable.

    Overall this is an interesting idea. In essence, it automates most unnecessary parts of security screening (staring at unchanging images) and taps groups of affordable internet personnel to do the easy but non-automatable task of deciding if a moving object is a person or a blowing trash bag. Once those two criteria have been passed, the real security specialists can respond, thus lowering the number of security personnel needed and the overall cost per camera monitered. And reducing cost for the same service is always a good thing.

  96. At least it should be. by danro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Besides, why should the average american be concerned for homeland security?
    I'm sure domestic any number of different things, cars, tobacco, alcohol, etc. kills more people each year on american soil than terrorism does.
    Yet, I see no huge overarching "war on speeding" for example.

    I'm not american, but let me tell you. From the outside this fixation on security looks a lot like hysteria.
    Furthermore it seems like a lot of people in the position to do so is converting this paranoia into money and power for themselves.

    I think the general US population would be much better of without these monsterously huge efforts to "increase security" att all costs.

    But what do I know, I'm just a dirty foreigner.

    --

    "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    1. Re:At least it should be. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am an American, and I agree with what you said

    2. Re:At least it should be. by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "I'm sure domestic any number of different things, cars, tobacco, alcohol, etc. kills more people each year on american soil than terrorism does.
      Yet, I see no huge overarching "war on speeding" for example."

      The point of the war on terror is to make sure it stays that way. All a terrorist would need to do is get one working nuclear weapon into some port city to kill hundreds of thousands of people. This would make death due to tobacco look like nothing. We know that countries that hate us and support terrorism have been trying to make nuclear weapons (Iraq, for example). That's why there is a war on terrorism and not a war on tobacco. Don't forget.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    3. Re:At least it should be. by castrox · · Score: 1

      Don't believe everything you see on Fox -- which by the way has splendid WarCraft 5 sceneries: "War On TERROR" in incredibly scary style!

      Fox as a news service sucks badly, I must say. They're just as biased as one can get.

      --
      Fight for your digital freedom, join the EFF *now*: http://www.eff.org/support/
    4. Re:At least it should be. by Idarubicin · · Score: 1
      All a terrorist would need to do is get one working nuclear weapon into some port city to kill hundreds of thousands of people. This would make death due to tobacco look like nothing.

      Okay idea; bad example. It is estimated by various* sources* that the annual death toll due to smoking in the United States is on the order of half a million per year.

      The CDC estimates that of the six hundred thousand cancer deaths per year in the United States, one third are the direct result of cigarette smoking, costing $60 billion per year in direct health costs and loss of productivity.

      How about a "war on smoking"? Tobacco use costs the United States almost as much each year as invading Iraq did--if we only count the costs of cancer care. You want to protect American lives? How about a Tomahawk or two for Philip Morris?

      *PDF links.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    5. Re:At least it should be. by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      It's far more likely that some power-hungry schmuck about to lose an election, and the much more intelligent puppeteers who support him behind the scenes, will 'acquire' a nuke from Kazakhstan and set it off themselves, blaming 'evil terrorists' for the act while they declare a national emergency and suspend elections 'until the crisis has passed'.

      It's amazing how many yahoos think that making a nuke is a piece of cake, even on a national level. And that smuggling one in is also easy. If a nuke goes off in America, I won't be looking for dark-skinned turban-wearing furriners - I'll be looking for the asshole who bought them the nuke and allowed them to walk into the country in the first place.

      And I'm willing to bet those assholes will be good ol' Americans.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    6. Re:At least it should be. by canajin56 · · Score: 2, Funny

      They'd never get away with it. There would be a HUGE investigation! Just like after 9/11.....oh....wait

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    7. Re:At least it should be. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought you were talking about 24 on Fox this season man.

    8. Re:At least it should be. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but I bet nobody's ever bought a pack of "run a plane into me" or took a "blow my building up" break. Smoking tobacco is voluntary, believe it or not. Tax the hell out of it, but don't make it illegal, you'll get gang wars over tobacco trafficking.

    9. Re:At least it should be. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fidel Castro, I'm sorry. You must be upset. Last I heard, you worked for rival network CNN's Havanna bureau. I'm sorry CNN is losing so bad to the upstart network that is fair and balanced.

    10. Re:At least it should be. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smoking is a personal choice. Getting blown up by a terrorist is not.

    11. Re:At least it should be. by rthille · · Score: 1

      Having sailed (on a sail boat) from Hawaii to San Francisco, I can assure you that slipping into San Francisco with a nuke would be quite easy. At no time were we approached by any authorities when we sailed in, and we sailed right into the marina at the foot of the Bay Bridge.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  97. Re:Sigh.. by shaitand · · Score: 1

    Regardless of what the article says, I don't always believe what I'm told. Firt I hear left and right cities throughout the world not just the US are putting up city wide wireless networking. Now I hear their is consideration of a plan to use wireless video cameras in conjuction with wireless networking... hmmm

  98. Two words by NoData · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It has nothing to do with watching you in your house, or in your neighbourhood. It has nothing to do with people watching random cameras.

    Slippery slope.

    1. Re:Two words by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Yeah, cause if you use cameras for one thing, you're just bound to use them for a different thing. Ban all cameras! That's the solution!

    2. Re:Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Name one "good" thing that doesn't have the potential to be a "bad" thing if taken to extreme.

    3. Re:Two words by Draigon · · Score: 1

      "Name one "good" thing that doesn't have the potential to be a "bad" thing if taken to extreme."

      Brownies.
      Hippies went pretty extreme and everything still looks good to me.

      --
      -Rabbit
    4. Re:Two words by dildatron · · Score: 1

      If you put razor blades or the like in brownies, that would have the potential to be bad.

      First you make delicious brownies.

      Then, you add things such as chocolate chips or sprinkles.

      Then, you get a bit daring and start adding toothepaste.

      Next thing you know, you're adding razor blades and glass shards, the dog's missing, your girlfriend is pregnant, and you find a bloody machete under the seat in your car..


      A very slippery slope

      --


      If you had nuts on your chin, would they be chin nuts?
  99. So... by Faust7 · · Score: 1

    How long until the X10 PATRIOT Act?

  100. Re:Sigh.. by uberslack · · Score: 1

    I really don't understand what your point is... if you are walking down the street, there is absolutely no right to privacy when it comes to being taped, watched, etc... you're right in that someone doesn't have the right to know what is in your right pocket, but if you are carrying a bag of pot in your right pocket and pull out while walking down the sidewalk, there is no invasion of privacy if a cop stops to ask what the hell you're thinking pulling out a bag in the middle of a public place... it's silly to argue that you have a right to privacy when walking down the street because you have a right to private information that is impossible to get from being taped, watched, etc... show me a camera that can detect "how much money you earn, what diseases run in your familly" and then your arguement may have a point...

    uberslack
    -the sexiest slacker, pothead, gay geek around-

    --
    Just because you're paranoid does not mean that the world is not full of assholes.
  101. Remote Broadcast... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What we need for 'homeland security' is easy to use remote video broadcast. This is the best thing to deter civil rights abuses. Having a camera does you no good if its recording to a tape. However remote broadcast through the internet to 10 different countries and suddenly you have bulletproof evidence that the perps can't reach of abuses commited against you or others.

    Just think what would have happened to that guy that recorded Rodney King if the cops had seen him with his camera. "Give Us the Tape, NOW." "I can't, this is hooked up to a remote broadcast feed linked to 10 different servers around the world."

  102. Not limited to terrorists by gone.fishing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This morning I heard a local shock-jock lament that we should treat gang-members as terrorists after all, they hurt far more people than terrorists do... I understand and to some degree agree with this logic.

    Seems to me that we could put webcams through-out the city and use untrained people to filter the cams and pass suspicious activity along to the police. Of course every once in a while a pizza delivery dude would be mistaken for a drug dealer and once in a while a lady waiting for a bus would be mistaken for a prostitute.

    But what the heck, what are a few civil liberties compared to safety? Everything - ask the few Jews that survived Nazi Germany.

    1. Re:Not limited to terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yay! I was waiting for Godwin's Law, and YOU FILLED MY NEED!

    2. Re:Not limited to terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what the heck, what are a few civil liberties compared to safety? Everything - ask the few Jews that survived Nazi Germany.

      Actually, the holocaust is a myth. The jews were going to be shipped off to Israel or any other country that would take them but the war prevented that so they were stuck in concentration camps. While thousands died in concenrtation camps of starvation, many millions more of German citizens died of starvation as well. Much of the holocaust myth was created by Stalin as a propoganda tool.

      Many, MANY jews successfully relocated.

      What IS a myth is that MILLIONS of jews died in execution chambers. These bodies have not been found in any sizable numbers, and Germany decidedly did not have the fuel necessary to incinerate millions of bodies into dust. Bodies were incinerated for hygenic purposes and nothing else, it would have taken over a century to incinerate six million jews in the cremation equipment said to exist.

      In fact, the primary reason Germany lost the war was they ran out of oil. This is also why the fought so desperately for North Africa.

      But this doesn't change the fact that International Jewry is a great threat to modern civilization and it would have been beneficial IF the jews had been exterminated. Instead, they settled in Israel just as was intended and they still control the capital markets which wreck havoc on our world.

      The problems of "globalization" are the same problems against which Hitler fought. International corporations and banks bled germany dry after WWI, just as they are bleeding our own nation dry.

      Look to the source of our decaying culture, our unemployed people, and crushing debt. You will find the Jew.

    3. Re:Not limited to terrorists by OMEGA+Power · · Score: 1
      I hope this was posted as a sick joke!

      However if it wasn't the person who wrote despertly needs to learn some history and stop spreading disgusting lies

    4. Re:Not limited to terrorists by skwirlmaster · · Score: 1

      Those who desire to give up freedom in order to gain security will not have, nor do they deserve, either one. -- Thomas Jefferson... Not bad eh? Seems the founding fathers are with us :D

      --
      My inner self is ineffable, so don't eff with me.
    5. Re:Not limited to terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think not.

      The strength of Jewish money is in its internationalism. It stretches a chain of banks and centers of financial control across the world and plays them on the side of the game that favors Judah. This center was, and for the moment is, in Germany, at Frankfort-on-the-Main, but feverish anxiety now accompanies the fear that it may have to be moved. Destiny is overtaking the Jewish World Power. The gold which is their god -- "the God of the living" is what they call their gold -- is being brought overseas on every available ship and locked up in vaults of Jewish bankers in North and South America, not to enrich this hemisphere but to mobilize Jewish financial power for any desperate stroke. Financial Jewry is afraid. It has a right to be afraid. Its conscience, still bloody from the war whose gains have not yet stopped, is in a troubled state.

      Single Jewish banking houses in any country, however great such banks should grow, would be no menace. In spite of the fact that the richest bankers in the world are Jews, as mere bankers in their several countries they would not occasion alarm. In straight out-and-out banking, the Jew is not a success. The Rothschilds were never bankers in a proper sense; they were money-lenders to nations whose representatives they had corrupted to seek the loans. They did business precisely on the plane of the money-lender in the side street who induces the rich man's son to borrow a large sum, knowing that the father will pay. That is scarcely banking. Brains of that sort may "get" money, but will not "make" money. The deposit banking of the world is not done in Jewish banks anyway, even Jewish depositors preferring banks which are managed by non-Jews.

      It is not, therefore, the success of the individual Jewish banking house that concerns us. Flabby-minded non-Jews who have been blinded by pro-Jewish propaganda find difficulty in seeing that point. They say that the individual Jewish business man has as much right to his business success as has anyone else. Which is a perfect Jewish platitude! Certainly he has. Who ever stated that he had not? But when you are dealing with a world chain of financial consulates, all of them linking up in a world system, none of them to be regarded as American banks, or British banks, or French banks, or Italian banks, or German banks, but all of them members of the Jewish World Banking System, you are obviously not dealing with individuals who are trying to make a living. You are then dealing with a mighty force for good or ill, and thus far, sad truth to know, the ill is mountainous in comparison.

      Nor does this Jewish banking system require that in each country a Jewish house be the most important. It is not the wealth and importance of single houses, but the wealth and importance of the world chain, that gives the strength. Kuhn, Loeb & Company is far from being the most important financial house in the United States, but with its foreign connections, all Jewish, it takes on a new aspect. Kuhn, Loeb & Company is far from being the most important banking house in the United States, and yet it was an idea that came out of Kuhn, Loeb & Company's office that now dominates the monetary system of the United States. Paul Warburg, a German Jew, scion of the Jewish world banking group, is boosted into undue prominence and power through the pressure of banker-bought prestige in government circles. It is his connections -- Jewish ones -- that count.

      The Warburg idea in the United States, dovetailing with the Sterns, the Furstenbergs, the Sonnenscheins and the Sassoons and Samuels and Bleichroeders overseas, was something to wonder at. Jewish bankers ran this war as they have run every great war. No informed Jew will deny that. Most informed Jews have boasted of it as indicating the importance of their people. Above the nations at war was an international financial committee, all Jewish, looking down upon all the ruction and blood as serenely as American baseball league directors look down upon a pennant series.

    6. Re:Not limited to terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sad thing is that you actually believe this crap.

      Racisim, or in this case, anti-semmitisim, really is a symptom of poor self-esteem. You hate yourself so much that you have to find someone you feel you are better than so you pick a minority and elevate yourself above them by stereotyping, scapegoating, and hate.

      Believe me, hate is not something that makes you better than these people, it puts you beneath them.

      You are entitled to your opinions and beliefs, you have that right, but having the right does not make it correct. All it does is it shows your ignorance.

      The world would be a much better place if we would all just ignore things like race. I hope you aren't spewing this hatered around your children. If you are, I hope that they are smart enough to see it for what it is.

    7. Re:Not limited to terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The world would be a much better place if we would all just ignore things like race.

      Then why is it the Jews have a whole country to their own kind, they only fuck their own kind, and they only co-mingle with their own kind.

      It is the JEW who is the racist. They are the ones who look down upon the gentiles and bankrupt them financially and morally.

      I am absolutely against racism, but the racist jew must be destroyed.

  103. Operating a Wireless Camera by CaffeineKills · · Score: 1

    It might be something like this: [reading screen slowly] "Check core temperature, yes slash no." [types] Yes. "Core temperature normal." Hmph. Not too shabby. "Vent radioactive gas." [types] NO. "Venting prevents explosi-on." Heeheee...whoa, this is hard. Where's my Tab? Okay, then, [types] YES, vent the stupid gas. [Cut to a farmer tending his corn. The gas release blows away part of the crop.] part of the crop.]

    --
    "Guns don't kill people, bullets do."
  104. Re:Sigh.. by Dashmon · · Score: 1

    The question is if your homeland's security needs a bunch of webcams. Terrorists (the excuse for everything these days) are too smart to be fooled by normal security camera's, and this will be no different. You shouldn't put a very doubtful result for security above the fact that you're creating a state in which "patriots" spy on their neighbours, reporting anything they think is bad.

  105. Hiding the cameras by orim · · Score: 1

    The real value in surveillance cameras is in people not knowing they're even there. In urban centers/banks/public places, it makes sense to make them big and visible, to act as a deterrent, but at highly sensitive places, there should be (body) heat detectors, tiny hidden cameras, trip wires, bear traps.... you get the point. You have no business sneaking around a nuclear plant.

    --
    "If you could only see what I've seen with your eyes..." - Roy Batty
    1. Re:Hiding the cameras by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > You have no business sneaking around a nuclear plant.

      And who exactly are you to tell me my buisness? Are you me all of a sudden? Are you a nuclear power plant? Guessing you are neither, I don't think you are qualified to be making that determination.

      Sheesh. Some people really seem to like telling other people their buisness.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  106. Here in State College, PA its 1984 by asv108 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    State College, PA had a tiny riot a few years ago in a section of the town that features a dense cluster of apartment buildings catering to students, referred to by some as "Beaver Canyon."

    Now, nearly five years after this event with almost no major incidents, the city council approved sticking cameras all over this area. There will be no cameras near residential areas for locals, just cameras for students. The police chief has designated the areas as a problem section and now he will have the legal right to monitor the place with a bunch of cameras.

    Using the same mentality other cities could monitor their problem areas and keep a close eye on what the minority population is up to. Personally, I would like to rent a house next to the police chief and stick up 10 AXIS cams covering every inch of his house.

  107. Re:Sigh.. by freeky_yoda · · Score: 2, Informative

    The TIPS program was killed off with the passing of the Homeland Security Act.

    This was briefly covered here with a link to a more substantial piece here

    Thank god for cooler heads.

    --
    Life is not a rehearsal. Step up!
  108. Won't catch terrorists with a routine by johnjay · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This doesn't sound as bad as I first thought, but it also doesn't sound very effective.

    First of all, a bunch of extra people watching the permiters of soft targets is a good thing. Many people would like to do that to contribute to their national security as long as
    a) it didn't infringe constitutional rights and
    b) they didn't have to be full-time security guards to do it (that is, they wouldn't have to change they're life substantially to help out)

    a) This is satisfied by having the web cams only along secure perimiters. You expect to be watched around secure installations; it's a necessary evil.
    b) This is satisfied by software that selects only unusual changes, so the amature security guard doesn't have to look at an empty strech of fence forever on the off chance a Terrorist might show up.

    The problem I see is the filtering of "unusual changes". Obviously, although most cameras will be looking at areas that have no movement and no change and are generally boring, some will be focused on gates, or on areas bordered by public streets and sidewalks. Those places will have a lot of movement and change. The software can't send the watchers an alert every time a car goes through a security gate or drives down a street, so it'll have to filter out a lot of activity that is "routine". So, all a Terrorist has to do to circumvent this is to do something inocuous every day near a camera until it's time to strike, when he goes to the exact same place and does the same thing, except with a lethal twist. The program has already filtered him out, so no alert is sent to the watchers.

    On one hand, this would force terrorists to establish patterns before they struck, which would be better than nothing.

    On the other hand, this type of preparation is similar to how they planned for 9/11. They did a lot of dry runs on airport security to figure out what would be suspicious and what wouldn't. These cameras would be a similar hurdle.

    A significant difference between the cameras and airport security is that a Terrorist testing airport security probably has a good idea every time he alerts the suspicions of airport security guards, while, in regard to these cameras, he would not have any idea when his actions were sent to watchers. So figuring out what works and what doesn't would be less certain.

    Still, having people watch the perimiters of soft targets would probably help the watchers feel better if nothing else. (Everyone keeps making jokes about Homeland Security because it seems to be giving advice on how to survive terrorism, and no real suggestions of how to prevent terrorism. This would allow us to feel that we're doing Something) Also, the filtering would probably be improved over time, so that something that might go unnoticed one year can be recognized the next.

  109. Watch elected officials by wardk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    this is a great idea. put one in every room in Washington DC and State Gov't building that lobbyists exist in. if the lobbyist is making policy (like energy, etc) then we'd have a record without having to sue the VP's office.

    I think that every elected official could have one in their office, this would help ensure that they are on the up and up.

    I mean, if they aren't doing anything illegal, immoral or shameful they have nothing to hide, right? and if they are, they don't have a right to keep it under wraps...not on our nickel.

    this is PUBLIC property, we taxpayers are the employer and employers have the right to monitor their employees, right?

    we could also put them in the executive offices and board rooms of every company ever busted for wrongdoing of any kind. keep tabs on them while were at it.

    William Shatner could could host a weekly show with submitted high(low)lights of the last weeks monitoring effort.

  110. Re:Sigh.. by Dashmon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My point is that there's more to privacy than just being seen in public places. The author of the post I replied on stated that in public areas you have no right whatsoever to privacy. That is not the case. You always, everywhere, have your right to privacy, but sometimes, you willing give some of your privacy up - when I go outside I let people see and tape me. Because it's willing, it is not a violation. The moment you do or say something outside, you make it public bussiness, that means you willingly give up your privacy for the moment, but not that you don't have your rights any longer on other subjects. This is not just about the camera's.

  111. funding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then the road leading to the power plant is declared sensitive. Then the roads leading to the road to the power plant

    My local electric utility (runs a nuclear power plant or two) is not in the best shape financially. They are also competing against some startups in this era of deregulation.

    I don't really see them interested in spending millions of dollars in survellience fees for activities not related to their plant security.

    If the gov't wants to watch you they are already doing it.

    This Jay Walker enterprise is not going to get that sort of business, they are looking for dollars from bottom line organizations with interest only in their own security concerns.

  112. What about The Spew? by lute3 · · Score: 1
    Stephenson is exactly what came to mind when I read this, but I was thinking of a different story. It's entitled "Spew--Are you on the trail of the next unexploited market niche - or just on a nookie hunt?"

    Here's a tidbit..

    As I have been watching Evan and you on the Stalker Channel the past couple of days, I have been trying to figure out if the two of you have a thing going. It's hard because the camera doesn't give me audio, I have to work it out from body language. And after careful analysis of instant replays, I suspect you of being one of those dangerous types who innocently give good body language to everyone. The type of girl who should have someone walking 10 paces in front of her with a red flashing light and a clanging bell. Just my type.
  113. Tigers and Rocks by joebok · · Score: 1

    From the article:
    Walker's goal right now is getting the federal government to spend $40 million to build prototype to see if the idea works.

    How is "success" going to be determined? Like the rock that keeps the tigers away?

  114. On posts below by brettlbecker · · Score: 1
    I see a few posts below saying things to the effect that '...this isn't really like 1984 because it doesn't go that far...' and '...this is only to protect sensitive areas, not your neighborhood, get over it!'

    While I'm sure that this is true, it's completely irresponsible to base an argument on those premises. It infuriates me when people have no idea of how dangerous just getting one foot inside the door really is.

    So it's not 1984 yet. Who cares? Either we have privacy, or we have a culture of systematic monitoring. Once it becomes okay to have joe-internet-user watching a power plant, the idea of monitoring becomes a *little* more okay... a little more acceptable. And then we move on to the next thing. This is called a slippery slope, and I can't understand why people can't or don't want to see it.

    The USA PATRIOT Act is a lot like this. People say, '...well, damn, we *were* attacked... this *is* a time of crisis, and so it's *okay* to let the government increase its ability to watch us and those who might do this kind of thing again. We can understand... it's necessary. We'll deal with it." We think it's okay if it only impedes our constitutional rights *a little*, *just for now*. But it really just creates a climate of acceptance, in which every further act is just that much easier to push through in the mind of the public.

    Once you open the door, it's damn hard to go back. There's a reason it's called a 'slippery' slope. So it may not be 1984 yet, but if people start using these ways of thinking, if we actually start believing these steps are *good* for us, and that we can sacrifice *a little* of our rights, we've cast off the entire set of our freedoms, even if the effects of that cast-off aren't visible for a long time to come.

    We need to stop thinking of ways to keep everyone out, and start finding ways of letting them in. The culture of fear only makes things worse.

    B

    --
    "We must still have chaos within in order to be able to give birth to a dancing star." --Friedrich Nietzsche
    1. Re:On posts below by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MOD PARENT UP!

      that pretty much covers it all

  115. Accountability? by Diphthong · · Score: 1


    Miscreants spray-painted "w3 0wnz j00" on the third cooling tower at the Three Mile Island nuclear facility overnight. The citizen watching Camera 7 at the time, Johnathan Witkowski, of 77 Washington Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, could not be reached for comment.
    </nightly-news>

    (any resemblance to real names and addresses is purely coincidental.)

  116. rant... by danro · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why would any terrorist worry about getting boxcutters past airport security now when they could dump an assload of ricin into a big city's reservoir and watch hundreds of thousands of people croak?

    Why did they bother to do it in the first place?

    Maybe because the attacks on the WTC and the Pentagon was first and formost an attack on the symbols of the military and financial might of the US and that the civilian victims were just a side effect?

    If they only were looking for a huge bodycount they would have choosen another target, or another method.
    Contrary to popular opinion, terrorism (per definition) isn't just about killing people, it's about furthering your agenda through intimidation.
    This means that they are mostly primarily interested in maximizing the propaganda value of their actions, not the destructions they cause.

    Take Usama Bin Laden for example.
    As I understand it one of his most important objectives was to get the US military out of Saudi Arabia.
    And, guess what, you're pulling out of there right now.
    From his point of view: Mission Accomplished.
    And all this essentialy because of the fear instilled by one operation.
    As an added bonus you crushed a secular regime in the middle east.
    Be prepared for Al Quaida operatives (or others) trying to instigate a islamic revolution in Iraq sometime in the next few years...

    I think most of the proposed methods for reducing terrorism misses the point.
    Almost all methods try to take the terrorists on directly. But terrorism is only the symptom, not the decease.
    It's root cause is: A lot of people are so desperate that supporting these guys seems like a good idea.
    A terrorist organization can't live without popular support somwhere. Take away this support for their cause and what you have left is a few extremists with a serious funding problem (ok, OBL might be an exception) and nowhere to hide.

    In the case of islamic terrorism solving the Palestinian question would probably go a long way towards reducing the threat.

    --

    "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    1. Re:rant... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that we were in SA because of the Iraqi menace. Now that three is no longer an Iraqi menace we can leave... perhaps to redeploy our forces in South Korea.

    2. Re:rant... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Aha, now at last I seen bin Laden's master plan: incite recklessness in USA, check. Plant incriminating evidence in Iraq, check. Give speech telling Iraqi's to resist, so the people will think there's a connection, check. Use USA tool to overthrow Saddam Hussein, check. USA no longer feels need to be in Saudi Arabia, checkmate.

      He fucked up and could have done it faster, though. In those speeched in late 2001, he should have made references to "We the people of Iraq" or something like that.

    3. Re:rant... by Halloween+Jack · · Score: 1
      Maybe because the attacks on the WTC and the Pentagon was first and formost an attack on the symbols of the military and financial might of the US and that the civilian victims were just a side effect?


      Point taken, that it's not about killing as many civilians as possible. Still, the 9/11 attacks as well as the Oklahoma City bombing happened just after the beginning of the work day, and the previous WTC bombing occurred just after noon; I don't think that the civilian casualties were a mere byproduct.

      --
      I looked into the abyss, and the abyss looked into me--and we both winked.
    4. Re:rant... by danro · · Score: 1

      I don't think that the civilian casualties were a mere byproduct.

      No, the timing was not a coincident. More dead increase the propaganda value, I am sure they choose that time based on both that the target would be densly populatet (thus ensuring a frightening bodycount) and that the planes they used would be near empty (making them easier to take and hold).

      It's just important to know that killing wasn't the main objective. To the terrorists (at least the masterminds) it was a means to an end.

      One indication on this is that the attack on the WTC 9/11 could easily hav been much worse. Ever noticed that the first plane hit the tower close to the top?
      Obviously it could have hit lower if the pilot wanted to (as the second plane did).
      The pilot must have known that everyone above the point of impact would burn or suffocate regardless of if the towers would be left standing or not, and that the building was bustling with people.

      Maybe the hit near the top was some last deranged act of "humanism" by the pilot, undoubtedly he could single-handedly have pushed the deathtoll into the tens of thousands by diving before inpact, but for some reason choose not to.
      Thus many in the first tower survived, and when the second plane hit that tower had been partly evacuated, so many of the inhabitants there also survived.

      --

      "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
  117. Welcome...to the machine by PHAEDRU5 · · Score: 1

    Isn't it wild that instead of computers serving us, we're being hired to serve them?

    --
    668: Neighbour of the Beast
  118. I smell a... by non · · Score: 1

    sudden downturn in the popularity of reality-tv shows!

    --
    ...vividly encapsulates that post-Watergate/pre-punk/coked-up moment when you could trust no one, least of all yourself.
  119. 'Kiln People' by David Brin covers this by siberian · · Score: 1

    This idea of 'professional voyeurs' and the ability to release avatars to buy and sell footage in real-time from a variety of public, private and hidden sources factors very large in 'Kiln People' (reviewed a few weeks ago here).

    The idea being that if you have a permanent record of time-space from a specific vantage point and you have overlapping areas of coverage its a natural to allow for time-tracking people across multiple geographic points.

    The owners of these units can barter their images with people who require them. Its quite an interesting concept.

    Read the book, its fun.

  120. Re:Thought Police watching you in bed at night. by airdrummer · · Score: 1

    ooooh, they have cameras that can read minds now? will wonders never cease;-}

  121. Re:It's not 1984... yes it is, but techie style by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One section of 1984 had everyone opening their doors at once and looking for the 'criminal'.

    With this proposal, no one has to get out of their chairs.

  122. Wierd != Successful by ebuck · · Score: 1

    Why is there the assumption that if an idea is sufficently bizzare, it has a greater possibility of success?

    Most (if not all) of the achievements around us today come from the refinement of previously successful solutions.

    Let's take a look at a much simpler system which is already available: camera monitoring against shoplifting.

    Camera systems in most stores are intended to prevent shoplifting, but often fail due to lack of human observers to interpert the tape. Even when there are people to observe, these system often lack people to act prior to the departure of the shoplifter (and so shoplifting is still a problem even in monitored stores)

    These systems do work well in providing proof that the person was shoplifting, provided that the person was caught (usually by other means)

    Assuming that we can teach software to recogonize a shoplifting event, we might be able to put more manpower on catching the shoplifter. But it will always be done "after the fact." To "pre-emptively" catch shady shoppers would be so outrageous that I sudder to think of the consequences.

    Eventually, the shoplift catchers will prioritize what they will act on and what they will allow to be taken. Just like police who "only" stop cars traveling 10 or 15 MPH over the speed limit.

  123. Old Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This has been suggested by David Brin in his Book "Earth".

  124. I'm in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok I'm a volunteer for this patriotic job. My only precondition is that I can monitor all the bedroom and shower cameras for Angelina Jolie, Natalie Portman...

  125. E-Sheep has already dreamed of this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See http://www.e-sheep.com/spiders/ for an alternative reality view of this topic...

  126. Extend to CCTV systems by djiin · · Score: 1

    I always thought that something along these lines would be good way of providing oversight of CCTV systems. In Britain, most towns and cities are monitored by CCTV but the only people who can see what is being monitored and recorded are those employed by the local coucils. Why not broadcast the feeds from local CCTV systems onto cable tv networks. There would be less likelihood of there not being witnesses to a crime committed, and there would be witnesses to any misuse of the cameras, ie. peeping through residential windows, spying on girls in the street etc.

  127. Yup, but good for other stuff by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 1

    They put up cameras in our public transportation system. All of a sudden, the kids stopped wreaking havoc in the trams and buses. The public transportation system saves money on maintenance, and we get cleaner transportation units and exist on videotape for a few days. I think it is a rather fair deal, at least until they start using the footage as evidence in otherwise unrelated cases.

    So, indeed, cameras protect, but not against desparate and truly malicious individuals. However, if they prevent some petty crimes, the police will free more resources for dealing with the big stuff. At least that's the intention...

    --

    Stop the brainwash

    1. Re:Yup, but good for other stuff by Beautyon · · Score: 1

      I think it is a rather fair deal, at least until they start using the footage as evidence in otherwise unrelated cases.

      This is the problem; they ALWAYS extend a systems uses, often silently. As soon as the cameras for Cogestion Charging were put in place in London (which works brilliantly at reducing traffic) Ken Livingston started talking about its "secondary uses" in monitoring who goes in and out of London. All the data is being made available to every authority that wants it, no warrant or review of any kind, and there is aparently no limit to how long they can keep this data.

      I dont have to spell out precisely what this means in a place like this.

      This is the problem with surveilance; feature creep. We cannot (or at least SHOULD not) give up our privacy for a little convenience, wether its too much traffic or a plague of grafitti.

      --
      ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
  128. CCTV security cameras are known to suck by plcurechax · · Score: 1

    In the UK where public and private owned CCTV cameras are everywhere already, reports into how well they work indicate that camera operators are likely to target just young males of visable minorities and engage in voyerism of attractive women.

    I don't have the link, but there was a good article in the NY Times I think about this, around 2001.

    Some Camera to Watch Over You is a related Wired article.

  129. Re:Suspicion isn't necessarily wrong, or bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fact: Charles Manson was a serial killer

    Fact: American has more serial killers than any other country.

    That's why I'm always very cautious when I meet an American.

  130. Re:Sigh.. by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Informative
    a policeman should be able to walk up to you and ask what he wants to know, even when you're not suspected of anything.

    No, a cop shouldn't be able to ask you anything if there is no reason to. I carry a newspaper clipping in my back pocket that proves this point - a man was awarded $6,000.00 (the incident occured the 4th of August, 1997 at 11:30pm) when a cop (Jean-Francois Rivard) stopped the music curator of McGill U (Rejean Mongeau) and asked to see ID, without probable cause, then arrested him when he refused.

    Maybe you like living in a police state, but here in Canada, we still have the right to tell the police to "fuck off" when they act illegally. And I do mean, "fuck off". The courts have also held that the police do not have an inherent right to be treated politely when they are overstepping their bounds, and that words like "fuck off" and "shithead" are to be expected in such situations.

    If you think this is too extreme, consider what you'd do if someone who wasn't a police officer tried to do the same (detain you without cause).

  131. Dept. of Redundancy Department by redtail1 · · Score: 1

    So a thousand home computer users will be able to download still images of an airplane that's about to strike a nuclear reactor. Yeah, that's useful.

  132. Re:how about.. by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 0, Troll

    That's ignorant.
    Legally armed citizens DETER crime.
    If you want to live like a sheep, move to England or Austrailia, they already do that.

    One last parting thought. When you shoot a burglar and kill him, you know that *HE* won't be a repeat offender.
    When some thug car jacker tries to jump in your car and you stick a 9mm Glock up his nostril and tell him "Get out of my car" you can be sure that he won't be jacking *YOUR* car and dragging your baby to death down the road by the seatbelt..

    Just say no to cowards. I prefer to defend myself.
    The police are only there to take a report AFTER the crime has been commited. You dial 911 the next time someone breaks into your home and see what happens.

    I don't dial 911, I dial *1911*

  133. Me too by krysith · · Score: 1

    I am an American, and I agree with what the parent post said too. I'm also not a coward.

  134. Re:Sigh.. by Dashmon · · Score: 1

    Hohoho! Read the post well! I was saying most people believe... etc. - which I think is ignorant as well as bad for the reasons you described, because if an induvidual'd try to that, they would mind, even though the person I was replying to was saying you don't have a right to privacy in public places. Easy now, we're on the same side her. :) That, and.. I definatly do not live in a police state (man, pot is legal here :P), and I like it. :)

  135. Re:Sigh.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
  136. That's just plain awesome. Mod up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hehe

  137. Re:Not INSIGHTFUL - Wrong! by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, it is quite insightful.

    How many times have we seen the videos of Mohommed Atta and his buddy walking through Logan airport and entering the gate on CNN over the last 1.5 years?

    Millions.

    Most major airports already have plenty of video surviellance to stop baggage theft. That didn't stop the 9/11 guys, nor would it stop anyone bent on a suicide mission.

    All that was needed was a good, solid cockpit door and 9/11 would just be another day on the calander. Or maybe an Air Marshall and 1 or 2 Glazer safety slugs. Or better intelligence gathering by the people whose job it is to know about and prevent these things (NSA, CIA, FBI).

    Better yet how about stopping the root cause of terrorism in the first place? As other posters have pointed out, terrorists don't usually recruit from populations that are happy and treated fairly . Perhaps US foriegn policy should concentrate less on supporting repressive regimes so they can get cheap oil and more on helping the people live free (without all the bombing ;) ). I'd be willing to bet more terrorism would be stopped 10 minutes after the creation of a Palestinian state, than with all the cameras, bombings and special ops combined. People won't attack your country if they feel you are acting fairly.

    Any and all of the above would help, But not more cameras.

    --
    Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  138. Homeland Security? Or... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Internet + Wireless Cameras = Cheap Porn =)

  139. Re:Sigh.. by tomhudson · · Score: 1
    You can watch me walk up and down the street, and what the hell can I do about it? I can confront you and tell you to stop watching me, but does that mean you are obligated to? Of course not.

    Last I looked, stalking was illegal. If you make a habit of following someone around, you are not just violating their rights, you are committing a criminal code offence (section 264 of the Canadian Criminal Code - or try google for representative laws in other jurisdictions).

    Even sitting outside in a car and maintaining a watch on someone's activities through their front window is illegal. I know one guy who got arrested for doing that - his explanation that it was his house, and he was spying on his wife banging some other guy, didn't cut it before the judge. He was still violating the rights of 2 people who had a reasonable expectation of privacy.

  140. System includes motion detection by StRex · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Please read the article.
    • The system includes software-based motion detection. Each camera sends an encrypted image to a central location (US HomeGuard data center) that decrypts it and uses software to compare whether the image changed since the last screen shot. If so, it sends this "suspect" image to one of the watchers. If the watcher indicates the image is suspicious, the system sends it and similar pictures to several reviewers. If they declare it suspicious, then professionals take over.
    • The system is looking at areas where people aren't supposed to be. Anyone/anything in this area shouldn't be there.
    • In theory, invalid targets such as stray cats could be weeded out by the image-detection software.
  141. Yeah, security... by marcink1234 · · Score: 1

    About 2 years ago some cameras were installed in the 'dangerous' places in Warsaw (the capital of Poland), for a huge amount of money. A few weeks later it occured, that a women was killed under the eye of a camera. The film was recovered later and helped to check what has happened but ... the man watching the camera picture just missed the whole happening.

    1. Re:Yeah, security... by Timmahhh!!! · · Score: 1

      As truly sad as that is, at least the camera provided some evidence of what happened. Hopefully, they were able to capture the assailant and bring him to justice. If this could happen more often, it might provide a deterrent to such horrendous crimes.

  142. Hey... by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    ...how about installing security cameras in the Congress and making citizens watch for "suspicious activity"...

    oh wait, it's called CSPAN, and nobody watches...

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  143. We are doing something like this now.... by c0y · · Score: 1
    ...only we're not looking for terrorists. Our neighborhood wireless internet coop has a couple webcams with great views of the Rocky Mountains :) Last year we had a record fire season, and used those cameras for smoke-spotting.

    Last July we had a small fire on the closest ridge visible in this view. It was started by lightning on a small rocky outcropping, and burned just one tree. When the wind was blowing west, some of the smoke was just barely visible in the webcam. Unfortunately it was not enough to be noticeable in a single frame (a review of time lapses showed the smoke however).

    So we've been wrestling with some way to automate detection of potential smoke. This is a very difficult proposition, because the potential for false positives is very high (due to fog/clouds, blowing snow, and blowing pine pollen which every summer creates these very cool clouds of greenish-yellow dust that blows off trees).

    One thing that's clear from the incident last July, single frames may not be enough for our volunteers to watch. So I have written a simple perl script to build short-term timelapses (last 30 minutes) which can be reviewed periodically. Using libwww I can periodically pull a frame from wireless cams with built-in web servers (this is all a work in progress, we have just three cams so far and I have work to do before the fire season starts again!)

  144. I got it all planned now... by unicron · · Score: 2, Funny

    I honestly and completely believe that Charlize Theron is a threat to my homeland. I will watch her home day and night if I have to! That is my dedication to this country!

    I also believe that most terrorists do their planning in bed and while taking a shower, so rig the cameras accordingly. Also, I'm going to need them to be zoom-capable so that I can intercept messages she may be writing.

    Should the time come when I need knock out gas and a full insertion team, I'll contact you.

    --
    Finally, math books without any of that base 6 crap in them.
    1. Re:I got it all planned now... by wo1verin3 · · Score: 1

      >> Should the time come when I need knock out
      >>gas and a full insertion team, I'll contact you

      You need a team to insert in to that?

    2. Re:I got it all planned now... by unicron · · Score: 1

      Well not at the same time, but yeah, I think my friends are deserving. Plus I know all the lyrics to just about every 3EB song, so I'm probably a shoe-in.

      --
      Finally, math books without any of that base 6 crap in them.
  145. Out of work? by csguy314 · · Score: 1

    Looking for an interesting job?
    Want to help make your country more free?

    Then join the Ministry of Love! No prior experience needed. Apply at a branch near you:
    New York Times
    Washington Post
    LA Times
    any local CNN office

    The Ministry of Love. Making history since... well that would be telling wouldn't it?

    --
    This is left as an exercise for the reader.
  146. NEO-CONstitution of the United States of Scumerica by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We the NEO-CONservaties of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union with God and His Nation of Israel, establish justice in His Almighty Name, override domestic election results, diminish civil liberties in the name of National Security, promote the Defence Budget and Haliburton Inc., and secure the kickbacks from Premium Unleaded to ourselves and our coterie, do ordain and establish this NEO-CONstitution for the United States of Scumerica.

  147. Define "Sensitive" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why wouldn't they put there cameras all around town? After all from what it seems "terrorists" seem to like blowing up buildings in urban areas as opposed to power plants etc. Case and point being the twin towers in NYC.

    So in other words the cities are Sensitive areas. You'll end up having cameras at on every street. Watching everything your doing, and to top it off, we want to have low paid ediots watching these tapes? Will this really increase our safety?

    Guy at center: Hey man, this guy just left his BMW running a block down from ya
    Co Conspiritor on cell phone: I see it, that should make some money on the market.

    Safety, or further errosion of rights/privacy/etc?

  148. Re:Suspicion isn't necessarily wrong, or bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Taking the bait here to add a data point.

    I lived in southwest Houston about 15 years ago. I hardly recognize the place now. It's not black people - that's too generic. It's bunches of the same people (whoever they are) all deciding to descend onto the same area. My area turned into a serious mess.

    One thing I want to know: how the hell do you translate something like "Bellaire" or "Gessner" into another language? They've done it, and those streets among many others in the area are now signed in two languages.

    People need to spread out and mix up. Any large group of insufficient diversity is just asking for trouble.

  149. I See Brownshirted Children... by karlandtanya · · Score: 1

    This presents a society where anybody anywhere is expected to monitor their neighbors and report on them to the authorities.

    This encourages mistrust among the people. It promotes unquestioning submission to authority.

    Totalitarianism is invariably presented as "security". It's not.

    "They that can give up essential liberty, to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety"--Benjamin Franklin

    --
    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
    1. Re:I See Brownshirted Children... by Timmahhh!!! · · Score: 1

      All spelling criticism aside...:-)

      Did you read the article? This has NOTHING TO DO with neighbors spying on one another. NOTHING. It is about surveilance of sensitive targets.

      Mistrust? I immediately mistrust someone sneaking around a restricted area near a resivoir or power facility, etc.

      I do not consider it a right or an essential liberty to go into an area that is restricted for the good of the society that has allowed me to prosper.

  150. oh, please... by airdrummer · · Score: 1

    >We (at least in the USA) are trained from birth to conform and not stand out.
    >We are taught in school to ridicule and/or fear people who are different

    perhaps u r thinking of japan, where kids are explicitly taught: "the protruding nail gets hammered down."

    unfortunately, conformity is an innate human failing, exacerbated by our rampant materialist society, hollywood, advertizing...

    overcoming human nature's less-desirable traits is why we invented religion, isn't it?

  151. Parallels in History by nicotinix · · Score: 1

    Does anyone see the parallels in history with that? East Germany needed to protect its workers paradise with a wall and land mines.

    People spying on their neighbors and turning them in to authorities.

    Soviet Russia and it's satellite states "protected" by electrified fences, watch towers with armed guards.

    Now tell me if history repeats itself.

  152. Re:Suspicion isn't necessarily wrong, or bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fact: Timothy McVeigh the terrorist behind the Oklamona City bombing was a Christian Extremist.

    Fact: America has more malitia groups than any other country in the west. Most of these groups consisting of Christian Extremists.

    Fact: There are more christians in the world than anyone else.

    Should I now be scared of every white christian redneck looking person I see?

    I dont think Paranoia is a solution for anything.

  153. Why doesn't anyone ask these geniuses by Catbeller · · Score: 1

    Why doesn't anyone ask these geniuses what the hell their schemes would have done on 9/11 to stop forty or so nearly unarmed men from crashing those airliners?

    What is the use of all these expensive, intrusive systems, other than to watch US?

  154. Hey dont forget the French by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We should be suspicious of the French too right, since they also hate us and think we are arrogant? After all they Do have "weapons of mass destruction".

  155. Sorry Charlie... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you'd read the article you'd notice that they're planning to outsource the monitoring to Pakistan.

  156. Re:Suspicion isn't necessarily wrong, or bad by cybercuzco · · Score: 1

    You know what would be funny, if your white protestant teen neighbor on the other sie of you thought it would be funny to get the new black people in town in trouble by defacing your car.

    --

  157. 1984 - Nazi Deuchland - Salem Mass. by jlcooke · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do you get a reward for turning in your neighbour? How much for a family member? What about your spouse?

    Garbage in, Garbage out. You're telling me "unsophisticated" "security guards" will have the power to turn anyone they don't like into the US authorities.

    Need I remind you that these people will not be "arrested", but will be treated like the folks at camp x-ray - threats to national security.

    This is a fucking witch hunt and the US gov't is trying to

    1. Re:1984 - Nazi Deuchland - Salem Mass. by Timmahhh!!! · · Score: 1

      RTFA...this is a proposal to the US Government. The US Government isn't trying to do a damn thing at this point other than decide whether or not this is a good idea.

      "You're telling me "unsophisticated" "security guards" will have the power to turn anyone they don't like into the US authorities."

      Yes. Assuming the person that they don't like is in an area under surveilance where THEY ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO BE!

      If I put up cameras at my house and you break in, does that make my photographing you a witch hunt? Hell NO. That is me, defending my home. Cameras at the proposed locations would be to spot people who DON'T BELONG THERE. If you can't or don't read the no trespassing signs, that's your bloody problem.

  158. I agree by EgoBoy · · Score: 1

    I'm also American and I have to say I agree. I mean hell, regardless of how much security we put into place, things will still slip into the cracks. There will be possible holes in the system etc.

    Its like security on the internet. All you can do is make it so hard and time consuming to crack, that the person gives up, but if you have the resources (a large linux cluster for example etc) and time you can break any encription.

    I think what the events of 911 showed is that we really didn't use the security we already had in place. Now that has changed. What more can we do? Should we have to change our way of life out of fear?

    1. Re:I agree by TheCarp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think what it really showed was what you said.. every system has cracks and determined people will always find a way through those cracks.

      All this extra security is there for one reason and one reason only... because it makes people FEEL better. Some guys bring boxcutters onto planes and hijack them and cause a mess... so we start enforcing every arbitrary rule in the book , whether it would have made any difference or not.

      People see armed gaurds and silly carry on bag restrictions and think "good the powers that be are doing something". Thats ALL it really accomplishes. People are NO safer now than ever before. However, the truth is they were never in much danger as I still believe you are about as likely to die from terrorist acts as you are to die from say, a lightning strike.

      Maybe is a sysadmin thing but I think about security, and after the last time I flew out of logan I thought about those box cutters. I dunno, I am pretty damned sure I could get something comparable on the plane if I really wanted to.

      I mean a box cutter? be serious! hell make it out of plastic and then you just need to hide the blades. Do you know how easy it is to hide a razor blade amongst things? fuck bring a laptop and shove the blade into the floppy drive or in the case behind the screen.

      Hell fuck it... just train them in proper hand to hand combat. Put a few people on the plane (like they did) with the right training and the boxcutter is just a formality. Give them pens if you really think they need a weapon.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  159. Where are these unsophisticated users from? by searchr · · Score: 1

    Hey Fox, you look like a Stand Up Guy. Could you do me a favor and watch over this Hen House for me? Thanks a Bunch!

  160. So basically.... by MrDickey · · Score: 1

    I can now get paid for watching all those suspicious foreign women undress

    --
    I hate my sig
  161. Can computers do this? by MrDickey · · Score: 1

    I've heard they are using computers to recognize faces of criminals at airports, ect. Couldn't a sophisticated computer program replace a mob of "Unsophisticated users"?

    --
    I hate my sig
  162. 1984 by failrate · · Score: 1

    A lot of people will bitch and moan about security features being like an Orwellian nightmare... but mass, random worldwide surveillance like this is actually IN the book 1984. I'm sure it will be effective, but should we implement it knowing full well the consequences of its misuse?

    --
    Voodoo Girl is the bomb!
    1. Re:1984 by Timmahhh!!! · · Score: 1

      "but mass, random worldwide surveillance like this is actually IN the book 1984"

      a) this is NOT "mass, random, worldwide sureveillance." It is a PROPOSAL for a focused system of cameras to watch areas that YOU aren't supposed to be in.

      b) 1984 is a great work of fiction. It is NOT supporting evidence of a vast real-world government conspiricy.

      c) I wish people would quote something other than 1984.

  163. Re:Sigh.. by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > I'm talking about your moral rights

    Please excuse my shortsightedness, it's just that when people talk about rights they have or think they have, they are usually talking about laws.

    We then get into an even stickier situation, as I don't believe there is any absolute moral truth. I believe, given certain circumstances, that bringing about the end of a human life can be moral, probably even a "good thing." There are many, many, people that would disagree.

    But of course, that is off the subject, so I leave it at that.

  164. Re:Sigh.. by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > The right to privacy has been affirmed, and was essentially created by (afaik) the Supreme Court.

    But do you have anything to back that up? Any names of people involved? I don't need case #s or anything, I can find that myself if I have a little info. I believe that we SHOULD have the right to privacy, but what we should have and what we DO have are entirely different.

  165. Let's clear some things up... by Retired+Replicant · · Score: 1

    I believe this system is designed to be deployed in areas where people do not normally go and/or during hours when people should not be present. Thus the presence of any human being in the image would be out of the ordinary. The proposed system isn't designed to monitor pedestrian foot traffic on the street corner or at the shopping mall during business hours. It might be very useful in watching over hundreds of miles of oil pipeline and power transmission lines running through the wilderness, the shores of water reservoirs, and our wilderness/rural borders with Mexico and Canada. It may make surveillance cheap enough to put into places that it was too expensive for in the past. Global time differences would be an asset (e.g. allowing people in other parts of the world to monitor sites during late-night hours).

  166. Re:Not INSIGHTFUL - Wrong! by sunbeam60 · · Score: 1

    I agree with you.

    If people feel they are being treated fairly, they will not act against you. However, you could use the exact same argument about allowing Germany to invade Austria in pre WWII times. Germany sure felt treated fairly and peace was preserved ... for a while.

    The problem is that there's a huge gap between how the US administration feels they treat the world and how the rest of the world feels treated. Although lobbyism is certainly a problem I think anyone can appreciate that Bush - no matter his levels of stipidity - doesn't wake up every day thinking "Today I'm gonna treat some anonymous Muhammed really badly, so I can buy his oil for cheap".

    No, the US administration feels they are doing the best they can and if I push aside my fears of being an etnocentric ass, I honestly think the Western World wishes the best for everyone else.

    I think the real question is: Does the people living under a despotic rule feel badly treated because they are or because they have corrupt governments telling them they are? No matter how much your everyday life sucks, nothing beats a scapegoat (again look at pre WWII Germany).

    If the case is that these areas breed terrorism because of misinformation about our true intent then surely the only right thing to do is to change their leadership. We will get no where by apeacement towards dictatorships. Although the US was no bleached hero during the Cold War, it is hard to rule out that their decision not to follow an apeacement policy towards the USSR landed results. Would West-berliners have been more or less free if the Allies had pulled out?

    However, if the people of the Middle East feels badly treated because truly they are, then it is up to us to change our ways.

    Once you've found your own answer to the question "Are we trying to do good or bad?", you will have found the answer to what we should do about dictatorships around the world.

  167. Oh no! by pmz · · Score: 1

    The last thing we need is more material for Fox reality shows! Stop it now before it's too late!

  168. Speaking of Burger King by K-Man · · Score: 1

    A slight inaccuracy in the article:
    They could confront the trespassers via the speakers in the Webcam ( "Hey, you!") and, if necessary, contact local authorities.
    Due to fiscal constraints, the challenge phrase has been changed. It is now "Welcome to Burger King, may I take your order?".

    --
    ---- "If we have to go on with these damned quantum jumps, then I'm sorry that I ever got involved" - Erwin Schrodinger
  169. prior art by rakerman · · Score: 1

    If I recall correctly, it was Neil Stephenson who proposed a system like this at Computers Freedom Privacy 2000. His idea was that home users would set up cameras pointing at various areas they were concerned about (e.g. an alleyway) and that a collaborative community of users around the world would take turns watching for suspicious activity.

  170. Sounds like a really boring job by Aidtopia · · Score: 1

    Suppose you're one of these freelance watchers. How many times are you going to want to look at a picture of a deer or a racoon or a cloud before you quit? How much will your response time lag when you realize that odds that you'll spot someone is infinitessimal.

    This is different than other security camera networks today. Many cameras (like convenience stores) just collect evidence to be used after a crime. Actively monitored networks (casinos, theme parks, public areas) have continuous activity that can help alleviate the boredom to some degree.

  171. why do I feel like... by josepha48 · · Score: 1

    ... somebodies watching me...

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!

  172. Are you for real? by Timmahhh!!! · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can't believe some of the things that I am reading here... First, let me say that I don't necessarily agree with Mr. Walker's idea that adding cameras in these areas will actually increase security. Cameras (for the most part) are forensic tools. They are tireless eyes that capture everything for later review. I don't think that adding these cameras with a bunch of bored homebodies watching is going to protect me from a terrorist attack. I would prefer to see actual guards partolling the perimeter of the mentioned "targets." Also, please learn some more diverse literary references. I am tired of the same old 1984 reference everytime the government does something. It is old. As for this whole "Big Brother" idea. It is pure paranoia. This is a private venture by an entrepreneur attempting to make money. Pure and simple. I would agree that Mr. Walker is attempting to make money from people's fear of being terrorized, but I don't see any deeper threat than that. This venture doesn't even appear to have government sponsorship at this time. Third, NO ONE IS SUPPOSED TO BE IN THE PLACES MONITORED. You can bet your ass that if I ran a company that had power plants, sensitivie areas, dangerous chemicals, etc. I would have a secure perimeter. I would have a big-ass fence with razor wire, armed guards, dogs, flood-lights, and yes, even cameras. I wouldn't pay some dope $10/hour to sit on his fat ass at home watching the cameras, but they would be there. Finally, who cares? I honestly don't give a damn if the government wants to take pictures of me walking down the middle of Fifth Avenue. I have no expectation of privacy in a public place. I am in public. I expect that there will be other people there and some may even be paying attention to what I am doing. Therefore, anything I want to remain private stays in my home or somewhere else where I can reasonably expect privacy. I think this new proposal, in and of itself, will be largely ineffective except to provide forensic evidence AFTER something has happened. I think money could be better spent on other measures. It is fascinating to me, however, how some people find conspiracy in everything. I certainly have skeletons in my closet that I want to stay there, but I don't see the FBI knocking on my door because they saw me walking down the street.

  173. Big Brother is..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...you, me or the guy next door!
    How bout lifting local handgun bans? Or they could let civilian sharpshooters like me to keep watch over terrorist hotspots with my .308 tactical rifle.
    Ok, bad idea. Do the thing with the cameras..

  174. image recognition by ivanmnemonic · · Score: 1
    Wouldn't it make more sense to have a computer(s) compare the webcam images? Why hire all those watchers? Sure you're creating jobs, but where's their salary coming from?

    And how about focusing some of this energy towards an increased awareness of our international activities? Ever wonder why we're being targeted by these people? Check out thisBBC journalist

  175. Who is responsible if the system fails by johnjay · · Score: 1

    Two more questions about this...
    First, if the system is supported by businesses who will "gladly pay to for the service to reduce their insurance costs" (paraphrase of article), what happens when the system fails? What happens when they go back through the records and find out that photos of a terrorist carrying a bomb into the building, was sent to 3 users, all of whom ignored it?

    Who will be sued? What will it do to the insurance benefit of having the system installed at a power plant? And, if the insurance benefit is reduced, who will be interested in supporting the system?

    Second question. What if businesses refuse to pay for it? What if, five years after the installation, they say (with some justification) "This system is protecting the citizenry, as well as our particular businesses. The taxpayer should shoulder some of the cost." (another version that would work: "Our local electric utility company is fighting against bankruptcy. In order to avoid going out of business and yet still protect the people, we will need the state to pay for the Terrorist Watch system for the next few years.") It seems very likely that this would happen. Once the possibility is put forth, businesses will continue to push to have the government pay more and more. And, since businesses are more organized then people, the government will eventually be forced to assume the entire cost of running the system.

  176. I guess I'm ahead of the times... by sketchyDOTcom · · Score: 1

    I've got my own "US HomeGuard Prototype" working here, every now and then there is a false alarm but I'm ready for any sneaky bastard trying to infiltrate my perimeter. Maybe I could get some of that 40 million that Walker is looking for to do his prototype...

  177. Congratulations! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have won the "first post to reference a dystopia other than that in 1984" award! By showing that your ultra-left-wing paranoid thinking is outside the box of the rest of Slashdot's ultra-left-wing paranoia, you win........ a date with Goatse man! Enjoy yourself, you crazy kid.

  178. What a dumb idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay, once you move the security camera control out the local office and into the mainstream, you lose all sort of context. So lets say there is a box of some sort (this is a target). A van with a yellow light on it pulls up and a guy with coveralls gets out. He does something in the box and drives away. Suspicious? No, but if you are in the security control there you should have a list of activities happening around the base (or area).

    I think if you have something as dangerous as a reactor, you should have the money to pay someone to sit there and watch cameras, patrol, etc.

    You need to have stronger localized security. I don't think I have seen any new security measures that actually make me feel safer.

    Translations:
    Gestapo - State Police (or Police of the State)
    KGB - Committee for state security
    Office of Homeland security

    Gee, they all sound nice enough...

  179. MOD UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks, Tim-Tim. I've gotten pretty sick of everyone comparing this country's every action since 9/11 to a WORK OF FICTION... one man's conjecture of a Marxist society taken to its illogical conclusion. I'm sure many of these posters are the same ones who mock Christians for putting so much stock in the Bible. Hey, even if the Bible is 1% historical truth and 99% fiction, it's still a more credible source than 1984. In closing, I'd just like to say that the puppy was a dog, but the industry, my friends... that was a revolution.

  180. Protesting CCTV (Spotting an Alien) by el-spectre · · Score: 1

    The best protest of ubiquitous video coverage was something I saw on TV a few years back. A gentleman in England (where most public places are being videotaped) was stopped while walking home from work, just outside his flat, because the police thought it was suspicious that a guy would be walking around that late at night. Of course he hadn't done anything wrong, so they let him go.

    As it happened he worked in a costume shop, so a week later he walked home as a 7 foot tall alien (complete with horns, antennae, and a tail). It was really funny watching 6 police cruisers stop and interview this alien walking the streets of london...

    --
    "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
  181. Re:Suspicion isn't necessarily wrong, or bad by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

    just reading that last line ALONE, I would have to say yes.

    --
    -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
  182. Free money by yy1 · · Score: 1

    Unless there is some kind of authentication system you can't automate this will just be free money like those "watch ads for money" thing. And of course if you have to authenticate that you are actually watching then you will get kind of bored of this really fast, this is dumb, people won't do it, they'll just leave the window up while they are sleeping or whatever, even if they have to find some way to fake they are not idle.

    --
    Because, sometimes they just have to touch the stove.
    -YY1
  183. Dibs by t0ny · · Score: 1

    Im going to be the first to 'patrol' the showers in the sorority houses. Help me 'work' for only $20/month!

    --

    Manipulate the moderator system! Mod someone as "overrated" today.

  184. This will help the economy by Anonymous+Custard · · Score: 1

    [sarcasm]This can't be a bad thing. It creates jobs! How can you not like something that creates jobs? A 800 billion dollar tax cut creates jobs, so we must like it. This surveilanece network will create jobs, too. If you're against this, you're against the economy, and the american people.[/sarcasm]

  185. Cameras do work by lpret · · Score: 1
    Cameras are a theft-deterrent. Even if they are percieved to be working. It's the fear that hard evidence will be able to be brought against you. Just look at any casino and the vast amount of cameras they have.

    However, logic is thrown out the window when you deal with terrorists who are willing to die for their cause. They could care less about evidence, as they plan on being dead anyways...

    --
    This is my digital signature. 10011011001
  186. That's funny...? by Viking+Coder · · Score: 1

    I don't seem to remember any webcams in Ted Kaczynski's cabin...?

    --
    Education is the silver bullet.
  187. Re:Not INSIGHTFUL - Wrong! by RealAlaskan · · Score: 0
    ... terrorists don't usually recruit from populations that are happy and treated fairly.

    The Symbonese Liberation Army. The Bader-Meinhoff Gang. Those were both terrorist groups, recruited from the spoiled brats of white middle and upper classes of the US and Germany, respectively. The white middle and upper classes in those two countries weren't significantly oppressed during the 60's through 90's. I think that counts as a counter example.

    Most of the terrorists we've seen in the news recently have been from Saudi Arabia; I think that they provided at least a plurality of Al Qida manpower. Saudi Arabia is not poor, is under local control, and if they aren't treated fairly, they certainly shouldn't blame us. Yet, they have funded most of the terrorist effort in recent years, and have produced a lot of the suicidal mass murders.

    The one thing that all of the terrorists have in common is that they come from truely FOUL dictatorships. The Palestinians are misruled by the PLO. We've all been hearing accounts of how Hussein had oppressed and abused the Iraqis; the PLO is just as murderous. Indonesia and Malaysia are far better than Iraq or Saudi Arabia, but they still have bad governments, and they do produce some terrorists. The Phillipines has a big problem with Muslim terrorists, and also a notoriously corrupt government (they do seem to be working on improving that, slowly). Saudi Arabia has a terribly oppressive government, and in the previous paragraph I pointed out that they've done more than their share to export hatred and death.

    Terrorism seems to be a creature of bad government. Even when the governments don't explicitly use it as a tool as Libya did, they use hatred of some convenient target like the US to keep their citizens too busy to hate their oppressors.

    Bad government may be a product of bad society, or vise versa. Certainly, soemone who's grown up in Iraq or Saudi Arabia, and watched as evil murders get ahead by doing evil, will have a very different view of the world than will an American.

    You'll notice that many of the riots we see reported in the Middle East happen on a Friday, local time. The imams preach in the mosques on Friday. That's not coincidence: the imams preach hatred and murder, and incite the mobs. They go out and riot after church. This religious reinforcement might help explain why oppressive governments in non muslim countries, such as Burma, haven't produced so many terrorists.

    Perhaps US foriegn policy should concentrate less on supporting repressive regimes so they can get cheap oil and more on helping the people live free (without all the bombing ;) ).

    That's what those recent wars in Afganistan and Iraq were all about. If the people there are free, they won't be bombing others.

  188. power plants and dams?? by bninja_penguin · · Score: 1

    Sure, maybe at first it will only be those places, but...
    On the other hand, if someone in New York is being paid to watch the Hoover dam, a few thousand miles away, who do they call?? or do they just e-mail the relevant authorities, who are trying to wade through 100s of SPAM messages....
    And further more, if I don't trust the people who are trained properly by the government (the police, and all the TLA agencies) Why in the fuck would I want to trust someone who used to work fast food?? I have a beard, and that right there is enough for some people to be wary of me. I've never been to more than 5 states here, much less ever left the country for anything, but hey, I've got a beard, and I'm from the mountains, so I must be dangerous eh??

    --
    For those who describe their systems as 'boxen', do you order multiple 'boxen' of corn flakes also?
  189. goes great with our current economic policy by g4dget · · Score: 1
    Wow, what a "great" idea with a long history:
    • The US can become just like the USSR. Oh, they didn't bother with the Internet, they just had people watch each other directly.
    • It goes great with current economic policies: people lose their jobs, then the government hires them to do this. Again, just like the USSR.
    • You can pay them even less if you stick them in prison first. Prisoners are already doing customer support for your airline tickets--why not have them watch you, too?
    • Surely, Walker has patented this, so it's a great example of entrepreneurial spirit.
    The idea of having lots of people watch lots of other people has been around for a while. Brin explored it in his book Kiln People. It may happen the way it is described in Kiln People: people deploying private web cams and making the images available.

    As a government-paid activity, it doesn't have a prayer. Just hiring, screening, and supervising the people involved would be a major undertaking and the system is open to abuse.

  190. the mantra of totalitarianism by g4dget · · Score: 1
    But equally depressing is a fact we can't dodge: without bold and innovative schemes to protect ourselves, we're sitting ducks.

    The eternal mantra of totalitarianism and fascism: "we need more government powers, more secrecy, and more government/industry collaboration in order to 'protect' the citizen; otherwise you could be killed."

    Yes, freedom comes with risks: people can somewhat more easily move around bombs, germs, and other bad stuff. That's not been invented on 9/11, it's been there since the beginning of human societies. You have to accept those risks if you want a free society.

    Statistically, terrorism is not going to kill you or me. And whatever terrorism level there may be is more effectively reduced by a combination of simple security measures, international development, and more careful foreign policy. Most likely, what is going to get you is that SUV you are going to collide with, your lack of decent preventive medical care, or the heart disease or cancer you get from your bad nutrition.

  191. my old joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    homeland security: hire 1/2 the population to watch the other 1/2 of the population

  192. Yeah right by Daetrin · · Score: 1
    But scarier still is not doing something to protect ourselves against demonstrably real threats. We found this out, of course, on September 11.

    Or we could perhaps just grit our teeth and accept that we live in a world in which we face a number of risks each day, and not give up our freedoms and privacy in order to combat just one of them.

    --
    This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  193. Philip K. Dick by timothy · · Score: 1

    So, this will be sent to a panel of three watchers, huh? Will they suppress the minority report?

    The parallel is not exact (far from it), but I bought / read the short story yesterday and was thinking how far ahead of his time PKD was (as usual) in describing such systems. Walker's system (as described) is closer to Orwell I suppose, but the 3-watchers bit jumped out at me.

    timothy

    --
    jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
  194. For those familiar with Babylon 5 by extrarice · · Score: 1

    The second season episode "In the Shadow of Z'ha'dum" features the creation of an earth government agency called "the Ministry of Peace (nicknamed "Minipax" by its employees,) with the alleged goal of helping reduce internal tensions among the EA's [Earth Alliance] populace. Its first visible action was to establish a program called the Night Watch, paying people 50 credits a week to wear black armbands and report suspicious people to the authorities so that troublemakers can be reformed before they disrupt the peace." (quote from above link).
    I was watching that particular episode last night, and the quiet, subtle way it was introduced and promoted scared the shit out of me. I can't help seeing parallels between the Night Watch and this new "US Home Guard".
    "The shadows have come. The shadows have come for us all..."
    (Mod -1 Babylon 5 fanboy)

    --
    "Jesus saves, but everyone else in a 10 foot radius takes full damage from the fireball."
    1. Re:For those familiar with Babylon 5 by BeowulfSchaeffer · · Score: 1

      Your B5 reference was the first thing I thought of when I read this article, after of course the shiver finished running down my spine. For the patriots here, I offer this quote: "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Ben Franklin 1759

  195. "Home Guard"--Very Apropos... by karlandtanya · · Score: 1
    Yes, I RTFA. They propose to get the general public to help monitor certain sensitive areas in which nobody has any business anyhow.


    The problem is that this indoctrinates the general public into the idea that "being a fink is a public service". Being a fink is not a public service. It's being a fink.


    In a general sense, the proposal really says to the public "Here, we want you to get into the habit of monitoring folks for this particular crime and reporting it to us.


    The "target market" of this program is the schoolyard fink who tries to improve his status with the administration by reporting "Johnny said a cuss word.".


    I understand that this proposal only suggests that we recruit the general public to watch over certain sensitive areas.


    My concern is that the qualifier "certain sensitive areas" will quickly be dropped.


    This is the TIPS program in sheeps clothing. "Bend over; I promise I'll only stick the tip in." Slippery slope, and all that.


    I do have to say, though, that the name "HomeGuard" describes the program spot-on. If you're a B5 Fan.

    --
    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
    1. Re:"Home Guard"--Very Apropos... by Timmahhh!!! · · Score: 1

      A fink?

      I suppose that by the dictionary definition of the word, that would be accurate. In reality, however, I think that carries a very different connotation. I think a fink is generally accepted as a person who "tattles" on others, no matter how petty the infraction, for their own personal gain. I am fairly certain that is what you meant in your usage.

      I would not call a person reporting suspicious activity around my local resivior or airport a fink any sooner that I would call you a fink for calling the police if you saw someone that appeared to be breaking into my home or selling drugs on the local school yard. I'm not talking about ratting out a bunch of hippies smoking a joint in the park, I am talking about crimes against society. Crimes that actually effect people.

      I am all about having privacy in my home. I have NO expectation of privacy in public. Hence, calling it public. If I don't want someone knowing something, I don't make it public. It stays at home or on my person or in my head. I have even LESS expectation of privacy at work or in restricted access areas. I EXPECT that I will be watched at all times. Therefore, I don't go or don't do anything that I am not supposed to (posting on slashdot aside...:-). You can drop the "sensitive target" qualifier if you want. As long as I am in a public place, I assume that someone is watching. Maybe not even with a camera...maybe just watching the low-tech, old-fashioned way (holes in the newspaper). If you want to call the police because you saw me speeding or jaywalking, fine. Go ahead, fink. On the other hand, if I see someone getting mugged in an alley, I am damn sure that I will call the cops shortly before I commence kicking (or attempting to kick) the crap out of the assailant. I personally view this as my civic and moral duty. I am sure the ACLU will find some problem with me "finking" on the criminal, but I don't give a damn. Call me a fink, but if I see a real crime being committed, I will do something about it whether there is a camera or not.

      Finally, you can be sure that we agree on one thing. I will not stand for the government to invade my privacy. I am a free citizen of a great nation and I have no intention of giving that up willingly...or at all. I believe the major difference between the two sides of this argument is the expectation of privacy. That's really what I see the core issue being. I don't care if you want to watch me walk down the street. If I want to avoid the cameras, I can.

      I get the feeling someone is watching me...oh wait...it's that camera in the corner. :-)

  196. Cameras V2 by 2Wrongs · · Score: 1

    The interesting thing will be when we can throw some good pattern recognition software, then cut out the distribution system. Then you have a cheap and marginally effective deterrent. I can see these going up everywhere in a decade or 2.

  197. Protect our public officials by Randym · · Score: 1
    ...a future iteration of the system might include facial recognition and other features that could track ordinary people.

    I think that everyone knows that the terrorists really hate our democratic system of government. Thus it is logical to presume that they will soon be targeting our public officials. What we really need, then, is one of these webcams in every public official's office!

    --
    DNA is a Turing machine. You, however, being dynamic and emergent, are not.
  198. Re:Not INSIGHTFUL - Wrong! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Terrorism seems to be a creature of bad government. Even when the governments don't explicitly use it as a tool as Libya did, they use hatred of some convenient target like the US to keep their citizens too busy to hate their oppressors.

    Like the IRA?

  199. liberty by milpunk · · Score: 1

    Yet another attempt to divert public funds into private pockets.

    But at least it will let more people be able to keep on eye on Boo Radley

    --
    The only thing I'm high on is love...Love for my Son and Daughters. Yes, a little LSD is all I need.-Marge Simpson
  200. A Question by OakLEE · · Score: 1

    How different is this from what they do now in Europe? I remember the last time I was there seeing government cameras around every corner.

    --
    The sun beams down on a brand new day, No more welfare tax to pay, Unsightly slums gone up in flashing light...
  201. It is a simple and effective way.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make all cameras viewing public places available to internet users. There is enough voyeurs out there that monitoring all the cameras will be handled effectively (better than a .gov employee who sits at a bank of monitors with camera input rotating every 5 minutes, 40 hours a week).

    If criminal activity is viewed, you call the police (and send them the water-marked video captured from the camera).

    How simple is that?

  202. THX 1138? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
    When the govt realizes that locking "some" people up is too much work and just drugs us "all"!

    Just wait for this to go from "voulantary" to "you're un-bushian" to "mandatory". Wait until the drug companies find a "anti-terrorist" drug [really just "pot" in a pill!] to give us all. Then we can drug everyone-terrorists will be those thinking [different is terrorism because we're scared!] Then at last, When the biotech companies find the "terrorist" gene we'll all be in luck. Only the rich, powerful, or non-us citizens will have it! [but we'll have our bio-engineered, cloned, & brainwashed soilders to defend us!]

  203. Welcome to East Germany by xixax · · Score: 1
    This has already been done. In East Germany 2 million out of the 17 million population were informers for the Stasi secret police.

    They probably won't target everywhere, but areas of suspected subversive activity and suspected enemies of the state. Imagine directing that array and being able to use it to scrutinise someone you don't like.

    Xix.

    --
    "Everything is adjustable, provided you have the right tools"
  204. Re:Sigh.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the parent post was being...what is it called? oh yeah, sarcastic.

  205. Re:Sigh.. by shaitand · · Score: 1

    http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/cases/conlaw.ht m

    You can find information about many rulings regarding the right to privacy on various issues. Basically the Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed with it's rulings that people have a right to privacy that is IMPLICIT in the constitution, not spelled out.

    Personally I don't remember any such implication in the constitution myself and find the Supreme Court's ability to amend the constitution without going through the full process a bit annoying but sometimes I guess it is useful.

  206. Re:Sigh.. by hesiod · · Score: 1

    >http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/cases/conlaw.h tm
    > You can find information about many rulings regarding the right to privacy on various issues.

    Okay, that's a good link, but do you have any links that have cases that aren't about sexual privacy, as that is all that was there related to privacy. Those cases all appear to be "privacy of information," such as homosexuality & contraceptives -- basically keeping your personal life to yourself. These have little to do with "property privacy," ie not being spied on.

  207. Re:Suspicion isn't necessarily wrong, or bad by freestyle-fiend · · Score: 1

    No two people have exactly the same racial characteristics, so segregating people by race is very difficult.

    Behaviour is not racial, so integration is quite possible.

  208. War on speeding by alexo · · Score: 1

    > Yet, I see no huge overarching "war on speeding" for example.

    Actually, there is. it's just not as popular because more voters speed than blow things up.

    However, the main idea is the same. There is no clear causality between speeding and accidents (although there may be correlation) but speed limits are relatively easy to monitor and enforce so, since most motorists tend to break them at least occasionally, they became a convenient source of income for the police. Think of it as a selective "road tax".

    Some interesting pages are:
    - COUNTERACT THE MYTH.
    - Speed Limit Fears: Lying with Science.

  209. Is it 1984? by linuxgeek666 · · Score: 1

    Say hello to Big Brother!... ... ... Then smash that fucking camera in!!!!!!!!!!!111

  210. Re:Sigh.. by shaitand · · Score: 1

    What I was establishing is that a right to privacy has been affirmed by the supreme court in numerous cases to the point that the existance of such a right doesn't even began to be a substantial issue to debate. What that right covers is and I suspect always will be in debate.

    But since you were incapable of browsing that site further yourself. Here is a direct link to supreme court decisions by topic. The second one under privacy hits closer to home... you can read plenty under privacy if you wish.

    http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/cases/topic.h tm

  211. Re:Sigh.. by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > But since you were incapable of browsing that site further yourself

    Since you are incapable of not being an ass... It's not that I couldn't browse the site, I did.

    The search engine seems about worthless for me, since I don't know what to look for. Searching for "privacy" returns so much noise that finding the pertinent ones requires wading through all this crap that's impossible (and unnecessarily long) to read. That's why I asked for specific cases to begin with. I'm obviously not a lawyer or PolSci student.

    Also, There is only so much I can find on my own, since I don't know dick about supreme court cases, not to mention that they are nearly impossible to read and retain anything useful. It's all legalese bullshit and long words. Not that there's anything wrong with long words, I understand most of them, but they intentionally use big words where shorter, more common ones would work just as well. That keeps the common people from understanding, just like the Catholics originally used only Latin so that the people needed priests to interpret it.

  212. Re:Sigh.. by shaitand · · Score: 1

    woah boy, calm down there ;)

    I agree with you about the legalise... you know something is wrong when most legal documents have sections which redefine the words used in them and there are whole law dictionaries that have special definitions for almost every word... some differ entirely from the true oxford definition.

    In any case, hope that page pointed you to some cases that were more along the lines of what you were looking for. I'd suggest reading the first couple paragraphs to get an idea what the case was about then googling the case to find articles and such that give better plain english ideas of what is going on in them.

  213. Terrorists' Mission Accomplished by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Clearly September 11 has managed to do much more subtle and destructive damage to the long-term well being of the U.S. This camera idea is horrible and is the product of pure hysteria. What is suspicious? Waiting outside for a friend, looking around nervously? Picking my ass? Reading a printout from the Internet? Talking on a cell phone??

    This is the slippery slope to a completely Big Brother world with zero room for individuality or freedom. And so, the ROI for the Sept. 11 attacks is huge, and is still rising: MISSION ACCOMPLISHED.

  214. Re:Sigh.. by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > I'd suggest reading the first couple paragraphs to get an idea what the case was about then googling the case to find articles

    Aha, now that is helpful. Thank you very much, and sorry about jumping on ya', I've was real tense last week, anticipating my best friend's wedding.