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Surveillance Camera Network Coming To New York?

yapplejax writes "New York City is seeking funding for a multi-million dollar surveillance system modeled on the one used in London. Police in the city already make use of the network of cameras in airports, banks, department stores and corporate offices — an arrangement used in cities across the country. This new project would augment that network with a city-wide grid. 'The system has four components: license plate readers, surveillance cameras, a coordination center, and roadblocks that can swing into action when needed. The primary purpose of the system is deterrence, and then an investigative tool.' But is it necessary? Steven Swain from the London Metropolitan Police states 'I don't know of a single incident where CCTV has actually been used to spot, apprehend or detain offenders in the act.'"

185 comments

  1. Hindsight by zoomshorts · · Score: 1

    Yes, never prevented anything.

    1. Re:Hindsight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Wrong. Once I put one in my bedroom my wife refuses to put out.

    2. Re:Hindsight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Once you "upgrade" your "girlfriend" to "wife", many bad things happen. First the "wife" will double or triple in size. Your credit cards will be maxed out so the "wife" can go shopping. The niceness will fade away into nagging/bitching. Sex will be come rare, if not non-existent. Then the "wife" will cheat on you, and then take half of everything you own and make you pay child support for the next 18 years.

      Upgrading from girlfriend to wife is worse than upgrading from XP to Vista.

    3. Re:Hindsight by panopticonisi · · Score: 1, Funny

      I'm all about Girlfriend 2.0, with multiple instance/environment support. If I weren't a geek, I could theoretically juggle multiple installs of Girlfriend at the same time, but my RAM seems to be severely limited. :(

    4. Re:Hindsight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm all about Girlfriend 2.0, with multiple instance/environment support. If I weren't a geek, I could theoretically juggle multiple installs of Girlfriend at the same time, but my RAM seems to be severely limited. :(

      digital bigamy is the new serial monogamy.

    5. Re:Hindsight by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1
      Blast and damn, typical Slashdot these days. Even the jokes are dupes.

      Nothing to see here, move along.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  2. Uh 'supposedly' by weierstrass · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the purpose of the network of number-plate-recognising cameras we have across this city isn't to surveil and 'deter' us, but to charge people who have to pay a congestion charge to drive through the city centre at busy times.
    How are they going to justify the Big Brother system in New York? Not only do they not have such a fee, but if they did it would be easily implemented by tolls on the bridges and tunnels that are the only way of getting to Manhattan from outside.

    --
    my password really is 'stinkypants'
    1. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by dave420 · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're confusing the Congestion Charge cameras with the City of London's "Ring of Steel". Those are not for charging folks, but to look at all cars entering/leaving the city, and to see if there are any suspicious movements. Data is not logged, nothing is stored in the national police computer - numberplates are simply checked against the police database, and any stolen cars or cars with incorrect license plates are flagged, and patrols on the streets are notified. How is that "Big Brother"?

    2. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by QMalcolm · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Data is not being logged *now*, nothing is stored in computers *yet*. Which do you think is more difficult: convincing the public to install a public surveillance system, or changing how that system operates once it's installed?

    3. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by dave420 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That depends on how the police are regulated. If they have decent civilian oversight, then the recording of data can only happen if the population wants it. It sounds like your real beef is with an unregulated police force that can do what it wants, not with CCTV. Perhaps you should try focussing your efforts on fixing the real problem?

    4. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by iamdrscience · · Score: 3, Informative

      How are they going to justify the Big Brother system in New York? Not only do they not have such a fee, but if they did it would be easily implemented by tolls on the bridges and tunnels that are the only way of getting to Manhattan from outside.
      There actually is talk of possibly instating a congestion charge in Manhattan, but it would only be for higher-traffic areas (i.e. midtown) which is why they're pushing the idea of surveillance cameras rather than bridge/tunnel tolls.
    5. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I am the 'Ring of Steel'. No-one could consume a Curry as vicious as I did last night without a 'Ring of Steel' to prevent damage to one's Rusty Sherrif's Badge.

    6. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Perhaps you should try focussing your efforts on fixing the real problem?

      In an ideal world, that would be the case. But given the level of power-mongering and outright corruption that exists in just about every major American city government, the best we can do is fight the symptoms.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    7. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by tpchur · · Score: 1

      Actually New York is going to start charging a congestion fee, just like in London.

    8. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Perhaps you should try focussing your efforts on fixing the real problem?

      In Fantasy land, yes. In the real world, you have to fight every aspect of the world-wide police state that is coming onto us.

      All surveillance and data logging system I know of have been abused. There will be no abuse if there is no system. And this should not prevent civilian oversight too. But you know, "something" may occur where some "patriot" could explain that storing the data "will give our intelligence professionals the essential tools they need to protect our nation".

    9. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by nurb432 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Data is not logged, nothing is stored in the national police computer"

      And you really believe this?

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    10. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "How are they going to justify the Big Brother system in New York? "

      Set it up for ANPR and cross-reference with insurance companies and the DMV registration database would be a nice, revenue-enhancing start. Uninsured and unlicensed drivers (esp. the drunk variety) are a danger to anyone. Use the system to nail them, and of course the attendant car and personal searches will bag some folks with prior warrants, guns, etc.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    11. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    12. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Then fight the power-mongering and outright corruption! Never settle for second-best - if your country is fucked, try to fix it! Did the founding fathers just say "eh... fuck it. what can we do?" or did they actually do something? It's the "fix the symptoms" attitude that lets fucked-up people stay in power, unchallenged. If the system is broke, it's your duty to try and fix it.

    13. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Disregard the parent. There is nothing to see here. Please move along.

    14. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      The armed forces aren't being used to round up dissenters yet.

      That SUV you bought last month hasn't been used to ram an airport yet.

      You haven't shot the president with that gun yet.

      Good thing we have presumption of innocence.

    15. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This system can not be reformed. (lets try something else). http://www.crimethinc.com/library/english/h4intro. html

    16. Re:Uh 'supposedly' by wyohman · · Score: 1

      Prove it!

  3. Pretty soon we will be saging by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1, Interesting
    We are at war with al-queda

    "No, we are fiendly with al-quaeda. We are at war with China"

    We have always been friendly with al-aueda.

    Oranges and lemons, said the bells of St clemens

    When will I grow rich, said the bells of St Patrich

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    1. Re:Pretty soon we will be saging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oranges and lemons, said the bells of St clemens

      Grats on the excellent political commentary.

      What I think you meant is this:

      Oranges and Lemons say the bells of St Clements
      You owe me two farthings say the bells of St Martins
      When will you pay me say the bells of Old Bailey
      When I grow rich say the bells of Shoreditch
      When will that be say the bells of Stepney
      I do not know say the old bells of Bow

  4. Strunk and White? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Police in the city already makes use of the network of cameras"

    And Slashdot editors make use of Strunk & White....or not.

    This is just big brother and people are buying in.

  5. Interesting... by dave420 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... It has been used many times in the UK to stop crimes in progress. For instance, I saw a TV show where the new speaking CCTV cameras interrupted some guy getting the shit kicked out of him. The attacker realised he was on CCTV and ran off. The camera operator simply followed him from one camera to the next, constantly reminding him he's been videotaped, the cops have his description and are en route, and that he really can't get away. He was caught. CCTV is a great technology. People are hesitant to accept it because it can be used inappropriately or illegally, but then so can any law-enforcement technology - does that mean we get rid of police cars, police helicopters, police computers, or even the police themselves? Shooting society in the foot by refusing to tackle corruption when it occurs, and instead taking the easy route of just crying foul when inherently useful technology is made available, is not helping anyone. CCTV, at its worst, gives police a way of seeing a recording of a crime that has happened, and at best gives police a view of a crime in progress. If the problem is the police might mis-use it, then your problem isn't with CCTV but the police. It would be in society's best interests to fix the problem, not limiting the police's efficiency. The cries of "1984! 1984!" are woefully inaccurate, as these cameras are not in our homes, but in our streets, a place the police are 100% free to go. The police have a mandate to use all available technology to protect the public - CCTV is just another tool in the toolbox.

    1. Re:Interesting... by farker+haiku · · Score: 1, Troll

      You're a fool mr dave420. I'm glad you only smoke pot in the comfort and safety of your own home, and never do anything remotely illegal outside of your front door.

      --
      Your sig(k) has been stolen. There is a puff of smoke!
    2. Re:Interesting... by dave420 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Could you not be bothered to actually debate what I said, or do you feel calling me a fool is somehow enough to counter my points? Or maybe you're in favour of people being able to do illegal stuff without fear of being caught? Fantastic.

    3. Re:Interesting... by MollyB · · Score: 1

      from the summary: Steven Swain from the London Metropolitan Police states 'I don't know of a single incident where CCTV has actually been used to spot, apprehend or detain offenders in the act'."

      The first five sentences in your post appears to contradict him. Care to elaborate?

    4. Re:Interesting... by ^Case^ · · Score: 1

      If the police is omnipresent you're basically living in a police state IMHO. I don't care if it's a camera on every corner or a policeman on every corner. And "fix the police if they're corrupt" is just not an argument for giving the police unlimited power. Things that were totally accepted 10 or 20 years ago are illegal today, who knows what it'll be like in another 10 to 20 years. That's why I oppose giving unlimited power to the police at least.

    5. Re:Interesting... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      I did elaborate. I told you what I saw. He doesn't say it's never happened, just that he doesn't know about it ever happening. Our positions are not mutually exclusive.

    6. Re:Interesting... by deftcoder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Show me someone who NEVER breaks ANY laws during their normal, day-to-day activities over the course of a year and I'll show you a bridge that I have for sale...

      How does that quote go? "If there aren't enough criminals, there aren't enough laws", or something like that?

      --
      Peace sells, but who's buying?
    7. Re:Interesting... by meringuoid · · Score: 1

      "Will we now create false gods to rule over us? How proud we have become, and how blind."
      -- Sister Miriam Godwinson, We Must Dissent, on the Self-Aware Colony

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    8. Re:Interesting... by panopticonisi · · Score: 1

      You have a point, in that police officers have the right to patrol the streets, but putting a camera at every intersection is definitely a violation of our reasonable expectation to privacy. Video cameras aren't the threat, but the next step is. How long before, in the interest of public safety, the system of monitoring is revised to allow recording and maintenance of an easily searchable database? But it's okay, it's only the bill of rights. inbeforeigetmoddeddownandlabelledatroll.

    9. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it will help to reduce crime. BUT THIS IS NOT THE END! It will progress until we have cameras in every single room of our homes. That too will help to reduce crime. Where do you draw the line? Freedom is not free. It is expensive, and it has nothing to do with money.

    10. Re:Interesting... by Fnagaton · · Score: 1

      Indeed, I have also seen where CCTV has been used to spot a crime actually in progress and to dispatch police to arrest the criminal. The statement from Steven Swain is being misinterpreted.
      CCTV Does help detect crime and does help catch criminals, that is a fact that. In London for example the automatic systems regularly catch criminals who have recently stolen cars which. This is because when cars are reported stolen the CCTV systems will automatically flag the car for interception. Amazingly enough some car thieves forget this fact.

      --
      Martin Piper
      Owner - ReplicaNet and RNLobby
    11. Re:Interesting... by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Insightful
      If you do something ILLEGAL outside your home, you DESERVE to get caught.

      Why do you specify 'outside your home'? Don't the laws apply just as much inside? Surely we should also install cameras inside the home. After all, if you're doing something illegal, you deserve to get caught. The cameras won't create new laws by themselves, only enforce the ones that exist. And if you're doing nothing illegal inside your home, you have nothing to worry about.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    12. Re:Interesting... by farker+haiku · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      dave420

      Anyone with 420 in their username is pretty much assured to either currently smoke pot, occassionaly poke smot, or has smoked pot in the past.

      --
      Your sig(k) has been stolen. There is a puff of smoke!
    13. Re:Interesting... by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The 21st century privacy problem isn't cameras. It's networks.

      Being observed by a camera in a public place is no big deal. Being followed by the video surveillance network is.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    14. Re:Interesting... by jeevesbond · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's because your points are so daft they're not even worth countering. The 'nothing to hide' mentality is dangerous as proven by the professor who wrote this paper.

      The problem with ubiquitous police surveillance is the creation of a Kafka-esque bureaucracy. One that can gather more information on your personal business than you know yourself, that bureaucracy will then judge you using that data--probably without you even realising--and without giving you an opportunity to defend yourself. Particularly with laws that allow the British police to detain suspects without charge; this ability was abused in South Africa during the Apartheid era by releasing people then re-arresting them the next day (and holding them for another ~28 days, rinse and repeat). I can see no reason why the same thing couldn't happen in the UK: all the government has to do is cite 'terrorism' and show a picture of some brown person and no-one will complain.

      I don't think a talking CCTV camera breaking up a fight is worth the infringement on society's privacy. What a brave politician would do is tackle the causes of that behaviour, why is it so many of the denizens of the UK act like arseholes? Fix that and you don't need the CCTV.

      It seems like the same problem and attempted resolution in New York, I doubt it will work there either (although I don't know much about the city).

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
    15. Re:Interesting... by Lazy+Jones · · Score: 1

      The difference between a state with such a surveillance network and the traditional kind of police state is still the legislation, i.e. which actions are punished and which aren't. Germany is much closer to a police state IMHO since they are always videotaping public (peaceful) demonstrations, so people feel threatened and/or punished for participating. The catch here is that with the individual powerless to display its opposition to the government's actions in relative safety and privacy, he will also become powerless to prevent the introduction of totalitarian laws, so a true police state is just a matter of time (if desired by politicians, anyway).

      --
      "I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
    16. Re:Interesting... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Wish I had a mod point or two. Of course, not all networked surveillance has to do with cameras, as witness the NSA wiretapping fiasco. Advanced communications is a two-edged sword all right.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    17. Re:Interesting... by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      I specified it because he did, but there's also the fact that outside is in PUBLIC, under the eye of everyone already. What difference does a camera make to your privacy when you're standing on the street in broad daylight with everyone already watching you? In your home, you have some reasonable expectation of privacy.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    18. Re:Interesting... by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      > For instance, I saw a TV show where the new speaking CCTV cameras interrupted some guy getting the shit kicked out of him. The attacker realised he was on CCTV and ran off. The camera operator simply followed him from one camera to the next, constantly reminding him he's been videotaped, the cops have his description and are en route, and that he really can't get away. He was caught. CCTV is a great technology.

      CCTV is indeed a great technology. Even with a crappy usb camera an old laptop and an always on internet connection one can monitor his home. On linux there is the simple "webcam" software and the sophisticated http://zoneminder.com/.

      But does a great technology makes a great deployment? A hi tech camera network can be used for all sorts of misdeed, it all depends on who's managing it. Will it be the police? will it be private employees, like it happened in a delicate operation like Iraq war?

      Second is: "I saw this piece on TV where CCTV stopped a crime...". One episode amplified by the media might be significant, it might also be mere propaganda. This one smells of propaganda: once the speaking camera stopped the crime, the operator should have simply followed the perpetrator. Telling him he's framed makes him more alert, more likely to think about ways to defeat the system (getting in smaller roads, stealing transport, clothes.

      Also, if a system is made to fight terrorism you simply don't tell the public it's been deployed for that purpose. Make it a system to check traffic violations or regulate it. To defend private buildings. It will be more effective. Well terrorism seems to me the troll that lets the governments do whatever they like so this one point is irrelevant.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    19. Re:Interesting... by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      In your home, you have some reasonable expectation of privacy.

      But what if putting cameras into homes could save lives? Just imagine if there'd been cameras in 25 Cromwell Street, Gloucester. These bleeding-heart privacy considerations are worthless compared to the many lives that could have been saved from a sadistic serial killer! Surely if it saves one innocent life it's worth it, and these civil liberties activists should really start living in the real world.

      More seriously, the chief problem with cameras is that they're asymmetric. Put a policeman on the street and he can see us, and we can see him. We know he's there and we act accordingly. Put cameras everywhere and they can see us and we can't see them. We have to assume we're being watched the whole time, and if coverage is continuous, being tracked from one screen to the next. Putting cameras everywhere isn't the equivalent of putting a uniformed policeman on each street - it's the equivalent of putting a secret policeman out there to follow you everywhere you go. Logging your every move in detail for future reference. Keeping a file on you.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    20. Re:Interesting... by RobertLTux · · Score: 2, Insightful

      there is a quote running about that states "have the most honest man write 12 lines and i will find something in them to hang him for"

      given the laws complexity (approaches and sometimes exceeds a rubiks teseract) everybody sometime does something worth time.

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    21. Re:Interesting... by jc42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Show me someone who NEVER breaks ANY laws during their normal, day-to-day activities ...

      There have been a number of things written about the logical impossibility of obeying all the laws in most jurisdictions. It might be fun to make a collection of examples.

      One that was publicised in a state where I once lived (name omitted to make you suspect that it might be where you live ;-) was a pair of laws with "reasonable" interpretations. One was an anti-vagrancy law, in which one of the acceptable kinds of evidence was not being in possession of any money. The other law forbid the possession of unspecified "gambling devices".

      It turned out the the police could (and did) charge people with vagrancy if they had no currency on their person. Credit cards weren't accepted; the police couldn't (legally) verify that they were valid. But if you had a few bills, or even a few coins in your pocket, well, you know any of the "coin/bill matching" games? A simple one is: One of us picks "same", the other "different". We both set down a coin at the same time; if they're both heads or both tails, the "same" guy gets both; otherwise the "different" guy gets both.

      So coins are legally "gambling devices". Similar gambling games exist for bills, usually based on the serial numbers. It follows that in this state, anyone can be arrested at any time, and depending on the contents of their pockets, they can be either charged with vagrancy or with possession of gambling devices.

      What's your favorite set of laws where you live, that can't all be obeyed at the same time, so that you can be arrested at any time and charged with violating one of the set?

      (In another place I once lived - Florida - there was a well-known law against "nude bathing". The wording made it illegal to take a bath in the privacy of your own bathroom without wearing clothes. But I liked to reply to this example by saying that I always took showers, and the law obviously didn't cover them, so it was possible to obey this law and stay clean. We never actually found a way to use this law to guarantee that anyone could be arrested. But a lot of people confessed to being nude-bathing criminals. ;-)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    22. Re:Interesting... by vertinox · · Score: 1

      The cries of "1984! 1984!" are woefully inaccurate, as these cameras are not in our homes, but in our streets, a place the police are 100% free to go. The police have a mandate to use all available technology to protect the public - CCTV is just another tool in the toolbox.

      The problem is that are not if the police misuse the technology, but rather someone down the road who decides to do away with democracy.

      Even though it is minor, these things build up over time so it has to be fought at every step of the way.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    23. Re:Interesting... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Do you have a reasonable expectation of privacy in public?

    24. Re:Interesting... by Wordsmith · · Score: 1

      This speaks to an issue with there being too many inappropriate laws; it says nothing about the enforcement issue. One would hope enforcement of any law would be 100 percent effective, and that all laws would be entirely fair; relying on the first to be false because the second demonstrably is amounts to un ugly hack of the social contract.

    25. Re:Interesting... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Then the problem isn't CCTV but stupid laws. Again - fix the problem - the stupid laws. If the laws are fair and decent, having someone with your best interests at heart looking out for you when you're in public is a great thing.

    26. Re:Interesting... by glitch23 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If you do something ILLEGAL outside your home, you DESERVE to get caught.

      Why do you specify 'outside your home'? Don't the laws apply just as much inside? Surely we should also install cameras inside the home. After all, if you're doing something illegal, you deserve to get caught. The cameras won't create new laws by themselves, only enforce the ones that exist. And if you're doing nothing illegal inside your home, you have nothing to worry about.

      For the same reason detectives can look at your trash when it is on the street but not when it is still in your house (until they have a warrant). They do make a distinction between what is public and what is private. Sure, you can do illegal things in your house but that is also the realm of the private and they know cameras can't go there, at least that's how it is now.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    27. Re:Interesting... by renoX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Look, increasing police power to fight the 'bad guys' has the not-so welcome side effect of increasing also the problems caused by the dishonest copq or dishonest politicians at the head of the police..
      If memory serves, not too long ago someone was charged because he was videotaping the police! Don't you notice a little assymetrical situation here? As always, who watch the watcher?

      I'm French and one of our previous president (Mitterand) ordered to intercept phone calls of a famous actress, IMHO he ordered this because he was attracted by her, does that sound good to you?

      And no, he wasn't punished for this (now he's dead) because in effect in France our presidents are our kings not like in Northen European countries where they are just working for the people, sigh..

    28. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, if someone walks up to me on the street and asks for my social security number, i expect to be able to say no.

    29. Re:Interesting... by illtud · · Score: 1

      from the summary: Steven Swain from the London Metropolitan Police states 'I don't know of a single incident where CCTV has actually been used to spot, apprehend or detain offenders in the act'."

      The first five sentences in your post appears to contradict him. Care to elaborate?


      It's a misquote. Every weekend you'll find dozens of incidents in towns all over the UK (probably dozens in London alone) where the police are called in response to CCTV operator callouts. The courts process thousands of cases a year where CCTV evidence is used (not usually presented, but used to get a guilty plea - there's very little point in pleading not guilty when there's a good quality film of you in the act). 95% of the cases are for affray, assault and criminal damage (drunken crimes). He may be referring to the "ring of steel" camera system, but that's not a CCTV surveillance system as such.

    30. Re:Interesting... by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1
      What madness. Please understand that I am, very deeply, an optimist.


      That being said, I know for a fact that you're understanding of human nature is woefully incomplete. You say that we should just tackle corruption as it happens--fair enough. But what happens when the corrupt become so powerful that the people are physically unable to tackle said corruption? This has happened many times in the past--Saddam's Iraq is actually a very good example.

      I know it's cliche, but this is something the framers of the USA constitution understood very well. Some men will always seek power over others--and will use any convenient means to do so.

    31. Re:Interesting... by fredklein · · Score: 1

      saw a TV show where the new speaking CCTV cameras interrupted some guy getting the shit kicked out of him.

      Firstly, I saw a TV show about the crew of a Starship who met up with (and kicked the ass of )aliens almost every week. The point? TV ain't necessarily real.

      2) It "interrupted" an assault. It did NOT 'Prevent' the assault. A cop ON THE SCENE (as opposed to 20 miles away, snacking on donuts, watching a monitor) might very well have prevented the assault inthe first place.

      The camera operator simply followed him from one camera to the next, ...which was only possible because the perp was too stupid to go somewhere the cameras couldn't see. Alleys, parks, parking garages, malls, stores, etc. for instance. Yes, some of those have their own surveillance, but the cops don't have access to that (yet). Duck into a store, out the back door (setting off the alarm, who cares), down the alley, and back onto the street a block away. Combine with a quick change of clothes (even just removing/reversing your jacket), and you could lose the surveillance easily.

      The cries of "1984! 1984!" are woefully inaccurate, as these cameras are not in our homes,

      Yet.

      but in our streets, a place the police are 100% free to go.

      I have no problem with a cop seeing me when I am in public. I have no problem with a camera seeing me when I'm in public. The difference is, the camera can EASILY (and worse, secretly) be hooked up to a recorder, and the video can be kept effectively forever. It can be searched YEARS later. It can be data-mined. I could face questioning days/weeks/months/years later as to why I deviated from my usual route to work, on the same day a child was kidnapped. If I wanted to run for office, my opponent could get embarassing footage of me picking my nose. If I make myself an enemy of those in power (maybe by protesting the now-pervasive surveillance, or exposing police corruption), I could be 'followed' by the cops thru the camera, and ticketed for every minor infraction (jaywalking, littering, loitering, etc).

    32. Re:Interesting... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      That's a completely different issue. You didn't bring your SSN with you on the street. These cameras aren't watching your SSN.

    33. Re:Interesting... by fredklein · · Score: 1

      What difference does a camera make to your privacy when you're standing on the street in broad daylight with everyone already watching you?

      People don't have photographic memories. Cameras do. People do not share with each other everything theysee. Camera do. Peoples memories cannot be data-mined years later, video recordings can.

      THAT'S the difference between being seen, and being recorded. And don't even try to point out these cameras are not recorded. They are, or can easily be.

    34. Re:Interesting... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      I'm not talking about a "nothing to hide" mentality. Far from it. I'm talking about ensuring our police forces run as the public wants them to, which in turn negates any concerns people have for any technology they use being mis-used.

      If you're worried about Kafka-esque bureaucracy, then CCTV isn't your worry - it's the police force and the legal system you are worried about. Fix the problem, not the symptom. You're shooting yourself, and society, in the foot by denying useful technology to the police because you think the police will mis-use it. Fix the police, and the worries go away.

      You clearly don't understand the laws surrounding the police holding people without charge. The reasons for the person being in charge are challenged frequently during the person's stay in police custody - by superintedants and judges, with either being able to overrule the claim. The 28 days isn't automatically given, and indeed lots of paperwork and people (both inside the police force and outside) have to agree for someone to stay in custody that long without charge. Your analogy with South Africa is again rather naive - the problem you state isn't people being held for 28 days without charge, but the police abusing their powers. Again - your problem is with the police, not CCTV. By your logic, the police shouldn't even exist, as they can abuse their positions. Clearly you can see your logic is flawed.

      We don't have privacy in public. That's why we have the words "private" and "public". There is nothing to stop a policeman from watching you in the streets, and nothing has changed with the advent of CCTV.

      I agree with you about fixing the causes of crime, and any sociologist or criminologist will tell you that those fixes will take time. Until they're fixed, the police need to use all technology they can to enforce the laws - indeed they're mandated to do so. Again, by your logic, the police should be disbanded and all efforts should be invested in solving people's need to cause crime, with the public riding out the wave of crime that will follow until crime disappears forever.

    35. Re:Interesting... by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      The first thing I did with my new MacBook Pro on Wednesday was to tape over the little camera lens (yes, after 15 years of using PCs I finally switched - but only because of the BootCamp/Parallels option).

    36. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > ... It has been used many times in the UK to stop crimes in progress. For instance, I saw a TV show where the new speaking CCTV cameras interrupted some guy getting the shit kicked out of him. The attacker realised he was on CCTV and ran off. The camera operator simply followed him from one camera to the next, constantly reminding him he's been videotaped, the cops have his description and are en route, and that he really can't get away. He was caught. CCTV is a great technology. People are hesitant to accept it because it can be used inappropriately or illegally, but then so can any law-enforcement technology - does that mean we get rid of police cars, police helicopters, police computers, or even the police themselves? Shooting society in the foot by refusing to tackle corruption when it occurs, and instead taking the easy route of just crying foul when inherently useful technology is made available, is not helping anyone. CCTV, at its worst, gives police a way of seeing a recording of a crime that has happened, and at best gives police a view of a crime in progress. If the problem is the police might mis-use it, then your problem isn't with CCTV but the police. It would be in society's best interests to fix the problem, not limiting the police's efficiency. The cries of "1984! 1984!" are woefully inaccurate, as these cameras are not in our homes, but in our streets, a place the police are 100% free to go. The police have a mandate to use all available technology to protect the public - CCTV is just another tool in the toolbox.

      ... It has been used many times in the UK to stop crimes in progress. For instance, I saw a TV show where the new speaking CCTV cameras interrupted some guy getting the shit kicked out of him. The attacker realised he was on CCTV and ran off. The camera operator simply followed him from one camera to the next, constantly reminding him he's been videotaped, the cops have his description and are en route, and that he really can't get away. He was caught. CCTV is a great technology. People are hesitant to accept it because it can be used inappropriately or illegally, but then so can any law-enforcement technology - does that mean we get rid of police cars, police helicopters, police computers, or even the police themselves? Shooting society in the foot by refusing to tackle corruption when it occurs, and instead taking the easy route of just crying foul when inherently useful technology is made available, is not helping anyone. CCTV, at its worst, gives police a way of seeing a recording of a crime that has happened, and at best gives police a view of a crime in progress. If the problem is the police might mis-use it, then your problem isn't with CCTV but the police. It would be in society's best interests to fix the problem, not limiting the police's efficiency. The cries of "1984! 1984!" are woefully inaccurate, as these cameras are not in our bodies, but only in our homes, a place the police (since the passage of the Preventing Rape Abuse Violence Domestic Act of 2009) are 100% free to go. The police have a mandate to use all available technology to protect the public - CCTV is just another tool in the toolbox.

      Fixed it for you.

    37. Re:Interesting... by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      Could this be why most statements from "officials" (or whatever sort) often contain so much bafflegab and buzzwords?

    38. Re:Interesting... by malsdavis · · Score: 1

      Why?

      Surely the privacy issue only comes about if that information is misused. Otherwise its just some security person looking at thousands of anonymous pixels moving about.

      Privacy is a policy issue, not a technological one.

    39. Re:Interesting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People don't remember anything clearly. Cameras show what actually happened. I'd much rather defend myself against evidence that actually happened "Here he is doing this, and then in this sequence he does this, and then..." than against accusations from witnesses whose memories, like anyone else's are largely an artefact constructed after the fact.

      An eyewitness can place me at the scene of a fight with a baseball bat in my hands. Maybe they saw a bat, maybe they saw me, and someone said "He's the one with the bat" during questioning, and that's it, I'm the guy with the bat. What was I doing...? They think hard, they visualise the bat swinging, "He hit the man in the head, more than once". What's my defense? I know I didn't have a bat, but there's a guy in the witness box who sincerely thinks that he saw it. He's not going to back down now.

      Then the jury see the video tape. It's a little fuzzy, I'm trying to grab someone. Am I hitting them? Am I trying to drag them out of the fight? It's not clear. There's a baseball bat. Oh, it's someone else who has the bat. Hey, they did hit that guy, looks like he got hit right in the face. Where's the guy with the bat? He's not in the dock. Not guilty.

      Is there a potential for abuse? Sure. Know what the antidote is? More cameras. DCI Thompson doesn't like being lied to, he used to kick a suspect in the balls and then ask him again. Won't do that on tape, it would look bad. Politicians making a deal to sell arms to a 3rd world country in exchange for a kickback? Not such a great idea on camera. In a world where no-one gets much privacy suddenly the things people do "behind closed doors" aren't ammunition any more. Gay chief of police? That's nice. Woman who runs your dental surgery dresses up as a pony on weekends? Fair enough. When you can't close your eyes and pretend it isn't happening you also can't be blackmailed for doing it yourself. Puritanism can't survive in the surveillance society.

    40. Re:Interesting... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Privacy is a policy issue, not a technological one.

      Actually it's both. And the means to preserve privacy often involve both.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    41. Re:Interesting... by jhol13 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps people act like assholes because they can get away with it?

      Then the CCTV would be the "perfect solution".

      Not that I like the solution, it is far too easily misused: legal but "morally" suspicious activity becomes in essence illegal (or else your face will be in front page of a yellow paper).

    42. Re:Interesting... by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "If the problem is the police might mis-use it, then your problem isn't with CCTV but the police."

      Well said, that is the problem in a nutshell. Public cameras are an extra eye in a PUBLIC area, under the current regime these cameras also watch the police and in fact help to keep everyone honest, they have as much to do with "1984" as video-phones and the fear of rats. If the voters are stupid enough to install a "1984" style government then CCTV will be the least of their problems.

      I dare any of the "1984" conspiracy theorists to give one REAL LIFE example of these cameras being misused in the UK.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    43. Re:Interesting... by fredklein · · Score: 1

      It's a little fuzzy, ... It's not clear. ...Oh, it's someone else who has the bat

      If it's so 'fuzzy' and 'not clear', then there is a good chance they'll simply I.D. YOU as the one with the bat.

      Is there a potential for abuse? Sure. Know what the antidote is? More cameras.

      The solution to 'too many cameras' is 'more cameras'?? Big Brother would LOVE you.

      In a world where no-one gets much privacy suddenly the things people do "behind closed doors" aren't ammunition any more.

      That's true by definition- if there is no privacy, there won't BE anything done 'behind closed doors' anymore.

      Gay chief of police? That's nice.

      Not if you're homophobic.

      Woman who runs your dental surgery dresses up as a pony on weekends? Fair enough.

      Not if you're for 'Family Values' and don't like that sort of thing.

      Puritanism can't survive in the surveillance society.

      But Hate, Intolerance and Bigotry can.

    44. Re:Interesting... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Yes, and we can look back on a long history of governments following policy designed to preserve privacy. All governments are scrupulously honest with respect to the law.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    45. Re:Interesting... by panopticonisi · · Score: 0

      Yes, I do. Would I submit to a random search of my person by an officer of the law? No. It would be a violation of that very expectation of privacy afforded to my by the fourth amendment.

    46. Re:Interesting... by smithmc · · Score: 1
      Why do you specify 'outside your home'? Don't the laws apply just as much inside? Surely we should also install cameras inside the home. After all, if you're doing something illegal, you deserve to get caught. The cameras won't create new laws by themselves, only enforce the ones that exist. And if you're doing nothing illegal inside your home, you have nothing to worry about.


      I don't know about where you live, but where I live the laws include the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution. The government may not search my property without obtaining a warrant, which requires probable cause. And putting publicly owned cameras on my property could certainly be construed as "taking of land for public use", for which the government would be required to provide "just compensation", as well. That's why it's not OK for the government to put cameras in private homes, while it is OK (legally - I'm not saying I like the idea) to put them in public places.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    47. Re:Interesting... by duerra · · Score: 1

      If you're worried about Kafka-esque bureaucracy, then CCTV isn't your worry - it's the police force and the legal system you are worried about. Fix the problem, not the symptom. The drive of humans to become more powerful and corrupt as a result of that power is well, WELL documented throughout the course of human history. It is not a "problem" which can be "cured". So what is the solution? Taking away the temptation. You don't tell alcoholics to go "cure" themselves instead of dealing with the symptoms of their thirst, do you? Of course, not, because it would do absolutely no good. You instead tell them to stay away from alcohol.

      You're shooting yourself, and society, in the foot by denying useful technology to the police because you think the police will mis-use it. Fix the police, and the worries go away. My country has survived for over 200 years without the need for constant surveillance everywhere I go. Maybe the real problem with society is people being so god-damned afraid to leave their front doors every morning that they feel that they can't do it without constant surveillance watching over them 24/7. How about, instead, we go back to the days when people used to go over and say hi to their neighbors every once in a while, and maybe bring over a hotdish to them for supper? Instead, we sit around talking like every person that passes us is somehow a social defect and might spontaneously lash out at us with fanged teeth and turn us into vampires.

      We don't have privacy in public. That's why we have the words "private" and "public". There is nothing to stop a policeman from watching you in the streets, and nothing has changed with the advent of CCTV. Yes, it has. You see, before we could wander the streets with a reasonable feeling of privacy. Sure, a policeman could watch us - but guess what? They still can! If you're too blind to see the difference in constant 24/7 surveillance vs. being watched because of some other suspicious activity, I pity you. There's always some "witch hunt" that society is keen on targeting, and keeping constant surveillance on society is only going to end up making people more and more bitter about it as "innocent" people get targeted. And any psychologist can tell you what happens when you repress those kinds of feelings for too long. Now let's try compounding it on a national scale.
  6. KooL by Tech.Luver · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    No, Really KooL

    1. Re:KooL by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      No ... Really Kool-Aid, and a lot of us appear to be drinking it.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  7. Re:A natural progression by symbolic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The article says, "Police officials say the surveillance cameras can help combat crime and terrorism..."

    When you start using "crime" and "Terrorism" in the same sentence to justify the actions of government, I think there's a big problem on the horizon. How long will it be before the two are used interchangeably?

  8. As we all know.. by mikkelm · · Score: 0

    .. no crime can be punished on evidence. People have to be stopped in the act.

    1. Re:As we all know.. by westlake · · Score: 1
      .. no crime can be punished on evidence. People have to be stopped in the act.

      If you are the victim, which would you choose? To see your attacker stopped in his tracks or wait for his arrest while lying in the morgue? Mall camera catches 2 men kidnapping woman

    2. Re:As we all know.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then again, prevention beats redemption any day, doesn't it?

    3. Re:As we all know.. by mikkelm · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand me fully.

      My post was directed at the quotation in the description about CCTV surveillance rarely stopping people in the act.

  9. Bait & Switch by Elemenope · · Score: 1

    How are they going to justify the Big Brother system in New York?

    But this is progress. As such, the burden is now on those like you to justify standing in the way of progress. Why are you such a reactionary luddite technophobe? Don't you want rapists and murderers to get caught? We should embrace this and all other technologies which will usher in a brave new world...eh...um, yeah!

    Seriously though, this is the mentality in a technocratic culture like ours. Tools are worshiped above and beyond any consequences that might proceed from their introduction. For once, I am sort of glad that there are some cranky old men and women sitting on the bench in many places, critical and suspicious of law enforcement and regulatory technology that many others unthinkingly rush to adopt. Many times, admittedly, such elderly crankiness produces decisions that turn upon misunderstandings of the technology. Much of the time, however, their cautious distrust of technology can retard the whole-scale embrace of new invasive techniques and devices for at least a little while. I was pleasantly surprised, for example, when the justices ruled that thermal surveillance cameras of a residence were a 'search' that required the standard warrant and probable cause.

    --
    All the techniques ever used to make men moral have been themselves thoroughly immoral... (Nietzsche)
  10. Re:A natural progression by dave420 · · Score: 1

    But they can be used to combat both crime and terrorism. Using two distinct words in one sentence to describe to two different notions is not dangerous. If you're worried about them being contracted to mean the same thing, then maybe you should focus on that, instead of people legitimately using them in their intended meanings? The police combat crime and terrorism - is that dangerous?

  11. Ya know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...the only people I've ever met who were genuinely keen on these systems were police officers and the guys who sell these systems.

    The term "do-gooders" comes up a lot in converstions with them, and never in a positive way.

    1. Re:Ya know... by Bearhouse · · Score: 1

      Maybe because they (the police) are the ones that have to deal with crime every day, and thus are probably the only people who are really qualified to discuss the benefits of such systems. I've worked on systems for law enforcement - believe me, the cops need all the help they can get, to - let's not forget it - protect us. Sure, there's a few 'bad apples', but there are crooks and cranks in every profession.

      Hence, the need for checks and balances. "The price of democracy is eternal vigilance," (Thomas Jefferson).

      Ya know what they say, "if you've done nothing wrong, you've nothing to worry about".

    2. Re:Ya know... by cs02rm0 · · Score: 1

      I'd rather that we made it more inconvenient for the police to do their job than easy for people to abuse the system - checks and balances are all very well for the people who obey them.

    3. Re:Ya know... by Hubbell · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Police officers in the US have no obligation to protect citizen's from harm, only to enforce the law after the fact. Case law already has a precedence for it in Miller v Washington or some shit. Was found that the police have no obligation to ensure or protect an individual's safety.

    4. Re:Ya know... by pops55 · · Score: 1

      The problem with what they say is...that you haven't done anything wrong yet.You can just sit back and wait they will change the laws for your own good,and then its time to worry.The government spends so much time telling us that we are free and many if not most believe this bullshit.

  12. Re:so you saw a TV show by Aladrin · · Score: 1

    By coincidence? Are you really that daft? The kidnappers weren't stupid. They KNEW there was a blindspot there.

    And you actually think Reality TV has any bearing on reality? Most of it controlled, and the rest, merely because they KNOW they are on camera, is altered. And if you're talking about those 'Scariest Police Chase' shows, the narrator makes up most of his 'facts' on the spot. They're even less truthful than the evening news.

    --
    "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
  13. Re:A natural progression by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Insightful
    When you start using "crime" and "Terrorism" in the same sentence to justify the actions of government, I think there's a big problem on the horizon. How long will it be before the two are used interchangeably?

    Personally, I only object to the redundancy. Saying that the police will combat 'crime and terrorism' is just like saying they will combat 'crime and murder', or 'crime and counterfeiting', or 'crime and burglary'. Terrorism is just one of many crimes the police are expected to combat, so saying 'crime and terrorism' is redundant.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  14. Cameras are OK :) by brys · · Score: 1

    This system works well in London. It's like street crime vaccine.
    Only people with paranoia don't like it :-)

  15. mod parent up by Xiph · · Score: 1

    Whoever modded this offtopic have no clue, and hasn't read 1984.
    please mod parent up

    --
    Blah blah sig blah blah blah irony blah blah
  16. Are you from London? by weierstrass · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, I'm not confusing the two. The article is. Presumably you yourself don't know anything about the subject, since you are too.

    The 'Ring of Steel' is not a 'a network of thousands of surveillance cameras that line London's intersections and neighborhoods'. It's a bunch of sort-of-roadblocks which are on most vehicle entrances to the City of London - London's financial district, and very different from Central London. By this I mean the road narrows to a single lane with a bend in it to slow down vehicles, and there's a little booth where (sometimes) police sit and watch you. They keep an eye out for suspicious looking vehicles like 'panel vans' or similar which have been used by the IRA for bombings. Often they are unmanned. The cops might occasionally ask you where you're going, but AFAIK there's no routing logging or looking up of number plates.

    There are also cameras as part of the Ring of Steel, but just to film vehicles at these ways in to the City. Note that the Ring only protects the City, which wasn't a target either of the 2005 bombings and failed bombings (except in as much that one of the bombed tube trains, the one at Moorgate, was probably inside the City when the bomb went off), nor of the recent failed firebombings in West Central London. It was set up in the early 90's, when the IRA were very active in London.

    As for the 'network of thousands of surveillance cameras' that they are talking about, well it's difficult to say because there are a lot of CCTV cameras in London, installed by many different organisations; local authorities, traffic cops, companies on their private property etc. But I think it's a fair assumption that they are referring to the Congestion Charge cameras, since there isn't to my knowledge another citywide network of cameras, other than the ones on the public transport system, which obviously don't line 'intersections and neighbourhoods'. These are at every street entrance to the Congestion charge zone, a much much bigger area which covers every part of London that could be said to be central; shopping districts, theatre district, all main govt. buildings, royal palaces etc. and track the number plates of every single car going in and out. They also cover many, many locations inside the zone, to catch people who got in without being recorded or who live in the zone (they still have to pay). There are also vans fitted with cameras which drive around filming number plates. The data is kept for quite a while, for billing and penalty recovery purposes among others. There are in fact guys who walk around suburban residential streets outside the zone, taking down all number plates looking for people who have been in the zone without paying (I've met one on the job). The cameras are kept on all the time, even though there is no charge after 7:30 pm or in before the morning rush hour.

    When the system was set up, the Greater London Authority promised they would not pass on the information to the police. Then they started to allow access to the police to look at the video afterwards if requested. Since the recent failed terrorism attacks, they now allow the police to watch in real time, but only for preventing and investigating 'threats to national security' - they can't use the info against normal crime.
    HTH.

    --
    my password really is 'stinkypants'
    1. Re:Are you from London? by dave420 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm on the same page as you are - I was trying to reconcile the faulty comparison between London's Ring of Steel (the real Police camera network) and the proposed NYC version, as the comparison was faulty, I was doomed to fail from the beginning - thanks for being polite in addressing my argumentative short-comings ;) I'm aware of the differences, especially between the CC camera network and the City's network.

      I lived in london for 8 years until May of this year, so I'm quite familiar with the CC and City.

  17. Extremely efficient ... by Lazy+Jones · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Those CCTV networks are extremely efficient, esp. when they can also look through your windows and in the next step in 10-20 years they have cameras in your house as well.

    With so much crime-preventing technology everywhere, the criminals will have but one choice: to infiltrate the police...

    --
    "I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
    1. Re:Extremely efficient ... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ... the criminals will have but one choice: to infiltrate the police ...

      But ... that's always been the case. Either they infiltrate the police (difficult but not impossible) or, more commonly, simply buy them off or blackmail them. Either way, cops are supposed to be held to a higher standard but frequently are not.

      Widespread surveillance may have a positive effect on petty crime (or it may not, I've yet to be convinced either way, and even if it does ... is it worth the economic and social costs?) but it will have little effect on the big boys. We could probably get the same effect on the small-time hoods by just putting more cops on the beat, and it would probably cost less money and have less impact on privacy. I don't know, but the blanket assumption that "cameras=less crime" is as unproven as "fewer guns=less crime". I don't trust anything anyone says on either subject, because everyone seems to have an agenda that precludes honest and rational discourse.

      What will probably happen is that the State will find a way to monetize privacy. Don't want a camera in your home? Well then, you'll have to pay a Risk Tax, because, well, everyone knows that people who live unmonitored lives are more likely to commit crimes, and those people should be forced to pay for the social costs of their privacy. Or something like that. I know, go ahead, laugh. Make jokes. But that's the kind of mindset that rules our government(s) these days. I know this is America, but I've long since shed my comfortable belief that bad things can't happen here, because too many of them already have.

      Really, it's time to take the rose-colored glasses off and see the people in power for who they truly are. It ain't pretty.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Extremely efficient ... by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      esp. when they can also look through your windows

      Except that the output from the cameras is taped, the ID of the camera operator is logged, and it's a *criminal offence* to use them to look through people's windows, at least in the UK. Yes, people have been convicted of it. No, they're not out of jail yet.

  18. Re:A natural progression by JonathanR · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not quite correct. Terrorism is subtly different to crime, in that these two behaviors are treated differently with respect to operational methods and policing powers.

    Expect to see the defined set of terrorism behaviors gradually supersede that of crime behaviors. As sure as a over-sized violin, you'll then be dispensed with any perception of redundancy: You'll only need to refer to terrorism.

  19. Another example by abigsmurf · · Score: 1
    Another example (possibly from the same problem). A girl was walking down a dodgy road alone, a CCTV operator noticed she was incredibly high risk to be attacked, trained cameras on her as she walked through a crime hotspot, noticed a guy clearly following her, called the police and talked them through what was happening. The guy then forced the girl into a nearby bush out of sight of the cameras but got spooked by the police sirens and ran off before he could do anything.

    I'm of the mind that you've little right to privacy in a public place.

    I also find it amusing that people always bring up 1984 in regards to CCTV when the main point of 1984 wasn't the surveillance but the use of propaganda and a false war to keep citizens in tow.

    1. Re:Another example by ScrewMaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I also find it amusing that people always bring up 1984 in regards to CCTV when the main point of 1984 wasn't the surveillance but the use of propaganda and a false war to keep citizens in tow.

      Apparently we have that problem as well.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Another example by EllisDees · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >I also find it amusing that people always bring up 1984 in regards to CCTV when the main point of 1984 wasn't the surveillance but the use of propaganda and a false war to keep citizens in tow.

      The main point was that if you give the government that much power over your lives, they will abuse it. The surveillance *was* one of the main points - you never knew when Big Brother was watching for subversive activities.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    3. Re:Another example by JustNiz · · Score: 2, Funny

      >> but the use of propaganda and a false war to keep citizens in tow.

      Hmm... thank goodness that could never happen in real l... err... wait a minute...

    4. Re:Another example by abigsmurf · · Score: 1

      the surveillance is the part everyone will mention but in the book it's a means to an end which is unquestioned loyalty and brainwashing through the use of a continual war.

    5. Re:Another example by fredklein · · Score: 1

      The guy then forced the girl into a nearby bush out of sight of the cameras but got spooked by the police sirens and ran off before he could do anything.

      See, that's the problem with cameras- he could EASILY have 'done something' (like slit her throat, or less violently, steal her purse) before the cops got there. If there was an ACTUAL COP on that street, instead of just a camera, then it's doubtful he would have done anything to begin with.

    6. Re:Another example by zmollusc · · Score: 1

      What do you mean 'if you give' the government more power? The government (whatever party is in charge) allocates more power to itself, and erodes rights of citizens. What you gonna do? Protest marches have to have police approval. Ownership of weapons is illegal.

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  20. My experience as a crime victim in London by fantomas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    5 years ago I was cycling home down a side street in London back to where I lived in one of the not so rich parts of town (Hackney) and 4 teenagers ran up to me and dragged me off my bike, kicked me in, and demanded my wallet. Luckily a woman in a flat overlooking the road saw what was going on and shouted down to tell the kids to stop, and I shouted up for her to call the police. The kids got scared and ran off with my bike (incidently, for the first time in my life, I'd like to say "thank you Nike!" - when I was a teenager Doc Martins and steel toe capped boots were the fashion - I am so happy troubled teenagers prefer soft padded trainers for kicking people in the head these days, probably saved me a lot of damage). I got up just as a Hells Angel kind of guy came past on a motorbike and I flagged him down and asked him to chase the kids - well I started climbing on the back before he could say no! and he spotted the kids going into a dark housing block stairwell. For some mad reason I chased them in, and I think they were so suprised to see me, combined with the fact that I was covered in blood and swearing at them and my friendly biker was outside pointing his headlight in and revving the bike engine, that they let go of the bike and I marched outside (phew, laptop and other valuables still in the panniers). Friendly biker drove his bike alongside me until I was back on the big roads and by chance a French couple were cycling past and stopped to check out I was ok and agreed to cycle home with me.

    When I got back I reported the incident to the police, and got myself sorted out at the local hospital.

    The police had CCTV footage of a lot of the above - but they said the footage was too poor to make a positive identification.

    So there ya go. CCTV didn't stop the crime in progress, and it was completely useless to catch anybody afterwards. What saved me from getting completely beaten up, helped retrieve my possessions, and got me home afterwards was a random mix of good hearted locals and passers by.

    Keep talking to your neighbours and help people you see in trouble, one day it could be you. I don't know any of the names of the people who helped me - but thanks to all of these kind strangers. Don't rely on CCTV, even when they've put it in, it might be useless.

    CCTV in Hackney didn't help me....

    1. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by dogger · · Score: 1

      wicked story man, glad you got your bike back. I always wonder why passer bys don't help in this situation but it warmed my heart to hear that they did.

    2. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      Shame you can't get a concealed carry pistol permit over there like in some parts of the USA. I'm sure after you kneecapped one of the kids, the rest would decide it was a bad idea to mess with you and run away. And the one with a missing kneecap would have a lasting reminder of why being a chav can be painful and unpleasant.

      -b.

    3. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there are lots of cases where poorly thought out solutions by a higher government
      authority trumps well thought out solutions by lower governments, so a problem gets
      worse. (ONE example: in the US, New York state used to have construction site inspectors
      that would visit every week or so; when the US law that established OSHA was passed,
      New York state cut back, and only federal inspections, every month, if that, were
      done.)

      It seems to me that bad laws drive out good ones.

      Of course, single federal laws can be neutered by special interests a lot more easily
      than 50 state laws.

    4. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by finkployd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Carrying a concealed firearm is not an automagic "get out of street crime free" card, you have to know how to use it (under stress, not shooting at paper at the range on a sunny day), and just as important, when to use it. You cannot go kneecapping anyone who makes you nervous on the street, but you also do not want to wait until you are getting pummeled when it would very easy for one or your assailants to disarm and shoot you.

      Also, let's not for a second pretend that the police, media, and public would view you as a hero for shooting a kid in the kneecap. After all of this friends testified that they were on their way to volunteer at the homeless shelter and this angry mean bastard on a bike tried to molest one of them and then shot him in the leg as he tried to escape, you would be vilified in the media and possibly facing hard time. Ironically only video cameras would be able to exonerate you (unless you had witnesses, but street thugs tend to avoid place with lots of witnesses).

      Point being, if you are going to carry a gun, get lots of training (should be mandatory). It should be more/better training that police officers get. I've been to ranges with many of them and their safety practices and general incompetence regarding their sidearms is often downright frightening. Also assume that if you do fire on someone, you are going to spend the rest of your life in jail (makes no difference if you are in the right or not). So do not do so unless it is a matter of life of death (not bruised ego).

      Finkployd

    5. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      Point being, if you are going to carry a gun, get lots of training (should be mandatory). It should be more/better training that police officers get.


      Agreed with you, disagree about the police part. It should be THE SAME as cops get; but cops should have better training for them mandated. Raise the standards of both cops and the public.


      -b.

    6. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      You cannot go kneecapping anyone who makes you nervous on the street, but you also do not want to wait until you are getting pummeled when it would very easy for one or your assailants to disarm and shoot you.

      It just occured to me that whenever someone is talking about carrying a gun, he is reminded that his attacker is likely to take the gun away from him and kill him. But, when someone is talking about disarming an attacker in self-defense, he's immediately reminded that disarming an armed attacker is 100% impossible and can never be done by anyone.
    7. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by finkployd · · Score: 1

      It just occured to me that whenever someone is talking about carrying a gun, he is reminded that his attacker is likely to take the gun away from him and kill him. But, when someone is talking about disarming an attacker in self-defense, he's immediately reminded that disarming an armed attacker is 100% impossible and can never be done by anyone.

      You are confusing the roles of attacker and defender.

      An attacker with a gun knows the attack is going to take place, therefore has the gun out, aimed at the person he is attacking, finger on the trigger, and is prepared. I wouldn't say 100% impossible, but I imagine it would be damn near impossible to take the gun away from this person without it going off in your direction.

      The defender in my example was being pummeled, presumably not in control of the situation and going for a gun would likely be noticed. Even in a situation where the fight has not broken out yet, the person doing the attacking is likely larger, more aware of the situation (being attacked, mugged, etc. can be very disorienting) and if he notices you going for a gun could possibly get it out of your hands before you draw, un-safety (if applicable), aim, and fire. The deck is stacked in the favor of the attacker generally, and this is by design. A gun on the defender can save him, but only if drawn at the right moment (too late and you are being beaten and that is not a good position to draw a gun in) and by someone who knows how to use it under duress. Pulling a gun and clicking it a few times because the safety is on gives the attacker time to remove it from you. Survival in life or death situations has as much to do with mental preparedness than anything else. If you are not mentally prepared to use a firearm (and comfortable in your resolve and competence with it) then you probably should not be carrying one because it is quite possible your attacker is.

      Finkployd

    8. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by fredklein · · Score: 1

      I think that when people use the 'too bad you didn't have a gun' argument, they ASSUME that the person would be trained in the proper use thereof. It's an unstated assumption.

    9. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by finkployd · · Score: 1

      I don't know why, I know a pretty significant number of people who own firearms who have had no training whatsoever. I don't have any numbers to back it up, but I assume that is the norm.

      Finkployd

    10. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      An attacker with a gun knows the attack is going to take place, therefore has the gun out, aimed at the person he is attacking, finger on the trigger, and is prepared. I wouldn't say 100% impossible, but I imagine it would be damn near impossible to take the gun away from this person without it going off in your direction.

      The gun is pointed away from you when you apply a disarm technique.

      The defender in my example was being pummeled, presumably not in control of the situation and going for a gun would likely be noticed.

      Yeah but it's always said: your gun will be taken away from you, period. Disarming can't be both possible and impossible at the same time.
    11. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The police had CCTV footage of a lot of the above - but they said the footage was too poor to make a positive identification.

      Don't know much about the police, do you ?

      They were almost certainly lying to you. Catching criminals is just too much like hard work. Also fills up the prisons, which the police are officially discouraged from doing.

    12. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by finkployd · · Score: 1

      Yeah but it's always said: your gun will be taken away from you, period. Disarming can't be both possible and impossible at the same time.


      By who? I never said that. There are plenty of examples where someone was attacked and having a gun drove off the attack (or killed the attacker). There are also plenty of example where the person's gun was taken away from them. It all comes down to the situation, mental state of the people involved, and luck. The deck is always stacked in favor of the attacker though, gun or not.

      Finkployd

    13. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by moosesocks · · Score: 1

      It works both ways.

      Who's not to say that the gang that attacked you wouldn't have simply shot you in the leg from a dark corner, and ran up to you to steal your stuff while you were on the ground writhing in pain.

      In this case, the crime could be easily executed by one person, which is a hell of a lot harder to track/catch than an entire gang.

      If you're going to carry a gun, it should be openly visible. Concealed carry scares the crap out of me. (It also sends the message "He's got a gun. I probably shouldn't mess with him.")

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    14. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by VlartBlart · · Score: 0

      A geek fights back.

      I'm not a fighter - I'm a computer programmer. I also used to live in Hackney (lots of knives and guns) and one night I was cycling home, it was raining, I'd just been dumped by my girlf - I was upset. I went to the local McDonalds (Mare St?) and on my way to the counter a group of black teens started taking the piss. I ignored it and ordered my food. I went to leave the store and still the piss-taking came. There was about 8 of them. I look like a geek. I unlocked my bike - it was a motorbike lock - heavy as hell. I put my food on the floor, grabbed the lock, went back inside the store, said to the gang "Oi!" and then whacked one of them round the head with the lock. I could have killed him. I turned round and walked and several of them jumped on my back and started hitting me in the face - I just kept walking, dragging them with me - I heard some of them say to leave it - most of them were trying to help their injured friend. I got outside to my bike - bleeding profusely - and cycled to my local pub round the corner (The Elephants Head) for help. I was covered in my own blood, had a broken nose and 2 black eyes. I was shaking like hell.

      It was the most violent thing I've ever done. I'm not proud of it. I haven't told many people.

      Just because I'm a mild mannered geek doesn't mean I can't fight back.

      Phew - was good to share that!

      -5 Off Topic!

    15. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      By who? I never said that.

      You're not the only person in the world.
    16. Re:My experience as a crime victim in London by finkployd · · Score: 1

      Ok, then to answer your original question (which appeared to be directed toward my position), I don't know why some people say that.

  21. How do cameras deter terrorists? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Those people blow themselves up when they attack! What will the cam do but record it for the evening news? Yell at him "stop, or I record you!"?

    Cameras don't prevent crimes. No single camera in history stopped a junkie from taking a granny's purse. No camera will ever prevent a terrorist attack.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:How do cameras deter terrorists? by westyx · · Score: 1

      The camera's do not stop the crime, just as having police patrol areas doesn't stop crime. The cameras allow the authorities to record who it was that blew themselves up (such as in the first wave of suicide bombings in london) and to capture the images of the second lot of suicide bombers who failed.

    2. Re:How do cameras deter terrorists? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Police could actually stop a crime. A policeman can draw his gun and offer the suspect the choice between freezing and enjoying the kiss of accelerated metal. A cam cannot. A cam can, at best, record it.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:How do cameras deter terrorists? by GregNorc · · Score: 1

      No not really. Only special units in the UK carry guns, not normal beat cops.

    4. Re:How do cameras deter terrorists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you say, "Stop, or I'll shoot you! With a camera!"

    5. Re:How do cameras deter terrorists? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I thought this is about NY?

      I know the idea of cams is from London. But even there, a cop has a larger chance to actually keep a criminal from acting than a cam has.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:How do cameras deter terrorists? by westyx · · Score: 1

      That works if you have a cop on every corner. Except it still doesn't work. The suicide bombers would not have been stopped by a copper drawing his gun, cos, well, noone suspected them.

    7. Re:How do cameras deter terrorists? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      That's why the whole deal of "protection against terrorism" is ridiculous at best. In fact, it's giving up liberties not for more security, but for nothing.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  22. Deterence is the WHOLE idea by redelm · · Score: 2, Insightful
    ... and not just with CCTV but the whole law enforcement system, cops through courts to jail. Punishment is a grossly net-negative payoff exercise. Stopping crime in progress not only requires CCTV and many operators, but a large ready-reaction [idle] police force. Expensive and more likely to get into mischief.

    Privacy is a right based on defending yourself against prejudice and [info]predators. It is not any right to break the law. There is no right to break the law if you won't get caught.

    In a public place, a reasonable person has no expectation of privacy and ought to conduct themselves to public standards. There might be an expectation of anonymity in our modern big cities. Historically unusual and decried. While anonymous writing is protected (but can be pierced), anonymous actions cannot be without lawlessness.

  23. +0.5 Scary; +0.5 Insightful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nothing to see here...

  24. Public surveillance cameras by defile · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think a massive surveillance camera network would create a safer, more open society so long as one key condition is met: the public and the police share access. I should be able to hit nyc.gov and view any camera at any time, including past recordings. Give me that and the police can install as many cameras as they want.

    1. Re:Public surveillance cameras by Tangent128 · · Score: 0

      Sounds fair. If the actions recorded are indeed public, and thus legal to record, then the public should have access.

    2. Re:Public surveillance cameras by jeorgen · · Score: 1
      I should be able to hit nyc.gov and view any camera at any time, including past recordings. Give me that and the police can install as many cameras as they want.

      But in that case the organization with the best algorithms and hardware will win over you. Google?

    3. Re:Public surveillance cameras by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      I think a massive surveillance camera network would create a safer, more open society ... where the citizens are afraid of every move they make. Great world to live in. What the fuck are we doing?

      Kill the leaders and start over.
    4. Re:Public surveillance cameras by mpe · · Score: 1

      I think a massive surveillance camera network would create a safer, more open society so long as one key condition is met: the public and the police share access. I should be able to hit nyc.gov and view any camera at any time, including past recordings. Give me that and the police can install as many cameras as they want.

      How about for every one in a public location two must go inside a police station or police vehicle.

    5. Re:Public surveillance cameras by gronofer · · Score: 1

      I think a massive surveillance camera network would create a safer, more open society so long as one key condition is met: the public and the police share access. I should be able to hit nyc.gov and view any camera at any time, including past recordings. Give me that and the police can install as many cameras as they want.
      Great, until people start compiling the most embarrassing moments in your video records and putting them up for search on youtube/myspace etc.
    6. Re:Public surveillance cameras by defile · · Score: 1

      Great, until people start compiling the most embarrassing moments in your video records and putting them up for search on youtube/myspace etc.

      Go ahead, throw the first stone.

  25. Prevent Terrorism? by Smarty2120 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's always a prevent terrorism vs. protect privacy argument by politicians, but for the most part, this is a fallacy. The cameras can't physically stop people from committing crime any more than the RFID scanners at the mall keep you from shoplifting. It's the threat of those devices alerting authorities nearby enough to stop or apprehend you that makes a difference. In all likelihood, these cameras will be deployed with no additional manpower to do anything in real time with the information. They'll likely just help authorities prosecute crimes after the fact or figure out what occurred (as happened with the London transit bombings). When you ask people about this privacy vs. prosecution tradeoff (if there's anyone left to prosecute), many fewer people respond "put us on camera" than when you claim it can help "prevent terrorism."

    The best part is that the system will protect the new Freedom Tower. It's not a Ring of Steel, it's a Ring of Freedom. I don't think we've taken the Freedom Fries legacy far enough. We should have Freedom Checkpoints at the airport, and Freedom Routers to sniff our e-mail, and Freedom Inquiries into our financial records. We spread Freedom all over Iraq and look how well it turned out.

  26. Useful - but ends do not justify means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There is no question that CCTV recordings have been useful in the prosecution of crime here in the UK (just go down to the average court room and see how often CCTV is used in evidence). Occasionally cameras have detected crime in progress, and allowed dispatch of police. And ANPR (automatic numberplate recognition) cameras may help with detection, deterrence and intelligence.

    The question is, at what price ? Is the erosion of our liberty (our right to go about our lawful business without the state intruding) acceptable ?
    Are these powers ones that we would trust the state with, no matter who is elected ?

    1. Re:Useful - but ends do not justify means by dave420 · · Score: 1

      "Intruding" is not the same as being watched. The CCTV operators aren't asking you where you're going or what you're going to do when you get there, they're just looking at what you're doing on the street. That's not eroding your liberty in the slightest. Do you demand police officers on the street don't look at you as you pass?

    2. Re:Useful - but ends do not justify means by gwk · · Score: 1

      They dont need to ask you where your going or what your doing, when they can just follow you from camera to camera until they have that information if they wish. The "when you get there" bit was a nice little addition but if they can follow to your destination thats sort of irrelevant anyway isnt it? Man going to a bar at lunch, teen aged girl going to a planned parenthood clinic, they might not be drinking on the job or getting an abortion but the video would certainly make a case that such a thing was occurring. They may not have been infact doing either things but either one could be used to drag someones character threw the mud, couple that with the fact that people have a tendency to believe anything they see on a television screen and the large body of evidence that suggests that people are easily swayed by deficiencies in the quality of the recorded video or the manner in which it was captured to incorrectly make judgments about a persons guilt or innocence (see the research into recorded police interviews with suspects presented to juries) you have a recipe for perpetuating gross injustices. You implicitly assume that the police will never abuse the technology or that the information it collects will never be released but your just wrong, we already have plenty of contradictory experience google "police officer stalking" or "ez-pass infidelity" just for some examples off the top of my head. Your analogy to a police officer on the street is flawed, technology fundamentally changes things. There is no society on earth that can afford to have a four or more police officers on every street corner 24 hours a day 365 days a year, but they can put cameras on every street corner and they can add image recognition software to track a person from camera to camera, they can add facial recognition, and they can store the data forever because disk space only gets cheaper. Twenty years down the road a promising new political canidate that promises to change things for the better will have his or her political career destroyed because of some past indiscretion that would have gone unnoticed 40 years in the past, (from a video leaked of course by the opposing politicians to the press). My argument isnt about a slippery slope in my view its a 1000 meter tumble off the side of a cliff, we have technologies are of little useful value for there stated purpose but are ripe for abuse in a million unintended ways.

  27. Re:A natural progression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > If you're worried about them being contracted to mean the same thing, then maybe you should focus on that

    Oh, I read that kind of argument somewhere recently. Ah, yes "It sounds like your real beef is with an unregulated police force that can do what it wants, not with CCTV. Perhaps you should try focussing your efforts on fixing the real problem?"

    Ok, let me try your way of reasoning:

    Dave420, it seems to be that, based on your post history, your real problem is that you would prefer living in a police state, as you have nothing to hide. Why don't you just do that and emigrate to China ?

    Or, more appropriately:

    Dave420, it seems that you just learn about the False Dilemma and the Red Herring fallacy. Why don't you post in rhetoric newsgroup/forums instead of slashdot ?

  28. Just keep they digital eye out of my house! by UberDragon · · Score: 0

    I'm not surprised to see this going forward in NYC, especially after the recent attacks. Frankly, I don't see it as a bad idea. The cameras will deter many crimes from taking place in those areas, though it certainly isn't going to stop another airplane falling from the sky nor the jacked up terrorist hell-bent on blowing up himself and everyone else he can get in range.

    My concerns lie in how this technological advantage will be abused, how long will it be before the police have a camera on my block with remote controls allowing them to point the camera anywhere with surely high-powered zoom. I have enough neighbors looking into my business I certainly don't need the eye in the sky making it worse.

    And if you are having a hard time believing the police would do such a thing, let's assume for a moment it would be impossible for the police to use this technology for anything sketchy.... What's going to stop the teen down the street from hacking into the surveillance system and posting your most recent extra-marital affair to your neighborhood church...

    Don't get me started on the security of it all..

    1. Re:Just keep they digital eye out of my house! by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      Frankly, I don't see it as a bad idea. The cameras will deter many crimes from taking place in those areas, though it certainly isn't going to stop another airplane falling from the sky nor the jacked up terrorist hell-bent on blowing up himself and everyone else he can get in range.

      Will they also deter public expression (street theatre, etc) and protests in public spaces like parks? One of the great things about NYC is that cool stuff goes on in public -- it would be a shame to see that curtailed. And, quite frankly, Rudi and Bloomy were the two worst things that happened to NYC in a long time.

      Fortunately, the other great thing about NY is that all laws aren't too vigorously enforced.

      -b.

    2. Re:Just keep they digital eye out of my house! by tom's+a-cold · · Score: 1

      One of the great things about NYC is that cool stuff goes on in public -- it would be a shame to see that curtailed.
      That's precisely why they're putting in the cameras: because they don't want people out in the streets doing unpredictable things-- cultural expression, political demos, you name it. Crime is just a pretext. If they cared about crime they'd address the root causes. The cameras are to induce a chilling effect that encourages us to stay in our homes or in closely managed quasi-public spaces such as shopping centers. These assholes can't stand the fact that there's such a thing as civil society. They want us to be docile and to be good at saying "Yeah boss." Visit your typical lifeless suburb populated by wage-slave zombies: that's their vision of utopia. Every possible human interaction monetized and closely managed.

      I wonder about countermeasures-- for example, everyone dressing alike and hiding their faces. Presumably they'll have to ban that too, or treat it as indication that you have something to hide. And, unlike London, there are plenty of people in NYC who will be willing to disable the cameras.

      And what happens when communities organize and tell the authorities that they don't want the cameras?

      --
      Get your teeth into a small slice: the cake of liberty
  29. chicago has them right now by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

    and the cops run them

  30. Mixed message by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what you are saying basically is the low-res CCTV is useless and they need to install proper high-res cameras that capture digital images to HD (reason security footage is often so poor is that it is taped to eh tape many many times and tapes wear out pretty fast). Oh and also more cameras to catch multiple angles.

    Because what you are telling is with your story is something like this. I was a in a car accident hit from the rear and got a whiplash. The airbag did nothing. Airbags are therefore useless.

    CCTV is not a solution, it is a tool, tools are NEVER a complete solution that will fix all of your problems STOP WATCHING AMERICAN DAY TIME TV. Oprah is never right, you can't fix everything with one solution.

    1. Re:Mixed message by fantomas · · Score: 1

      No buddy, I am saying people, building a community that looks out for each other (because alas there will always be at least a few idiots), is the solution.

      I am saying CCTV is not the solution.

  31. useless ? dont think so. by voraistos · · Score: 1

    "Steven Swain from the London Metropolitan Police states 'I don't know of a single incident where CCTV has actually been used to spot, apprehend or detain offenders in the act'."

    Perhaps this guy should start doing his job then. Because strangely, each time MI5 (or whoever does it, the Scotland yard people), catches a terrorist, or anybody attempting to do something bad, we see it on TV, and those images we see are CCTV, which they can use as proof.

    "Crime prevention" means that at the end, there is no crime, so its probably difficult for them to arrest and prosecute a long bearded guy who was seen putting a gas bottle in his car boot. As far as i know Anyone can own gas and anyone can have beard - the hair that grows naturally on your face-. However that same guy might move around, and, knowing where he is going, the secret services people or just the cops might install other devices to hear them say "I plan to get rid of the queen" or "hey lets go bomb McDonald's ! ". On another hand the same guy could have a friend who ran out of gas a mile away and just wanted to give him a hand, something one can easily see on camera and think "shit we gat the wrong guy".

  32. Masks by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Time to start wearing a fake beard anytime im outside, just to piss them off.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  33. Movie publicity campaigns by crankyspice · · Score: 1

    This is getting a little out of hand; painting 7-11s to look like Kwik-E-Marts was one thing, but this is a bit too far. Guys, I've already seen Bourne Ultimatum, don't need this stunt...

    --
    geek. lawyer.
  34. Oblig. Simpsons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    FTA "Kelly disagreed, pointing out that it is practically impossible to know what has been deterred. 'We don't know acts that may have been planned that -- because of the surveillance and deterrence systems that are in place -- did not go forward.'"
    Good lord, is Homer the New York City Police Commissioner?

    Homer: Ah, not a bear in sight! the Bear Patrol must be working like a charm.
    Lisa: That's specious reasoning dad.
    Homer: Thank you honey.
    Lisa: By your logic I could claim that this rock keeps tigers away.
    Homer: Oh how does it work?
    Lisa: It doesn't work.
    Homer: uhuh.
    Lisa: It's just a stupid rock.
    Homer: uhuh.
    Lisa: But I don't see any tigers around here, do you?
    Homer: Lisa, I want to buy your rock.

    Maybe I should try selling my ROCK based anti-terrorist system to all major cities of the world.

  35. Re:A natural progression by symbolic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The reason I made the distinction is because "terrorism" and the so-called "war on terrorism" isn't just a local police issue. It has the force of a huge bureaucracy (DHS) as well as the military behind it.

  36. I do this for a living - It's bs by cusco · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The problem with security cameras lies between the chair and the keyboard. One operator can watch up to eight monitors displaying nine images each for up to twelve minutes. After that he'd better take a half hour patrol, because his brain's mush. Your example is one of those rare moments of serendipity where everything worked. It's not likely to be repeated more than a couple times a year. By the way, very, very few CCTV cameras are installed with audio features unless the vendor happens to be friends with the purchasing agent and so can ramp up the price.

    Analysis software is still considered bleeding edge technology, and as such doesn't work well most of the time. It's good for a situation where lighting is constant, activity is regular, and backgrounds are plain. In other words, it works well for finding people loitering in stairwells, and sometimes prowling parking garages, but is useless on a city street. I know this for a fact, since one of our customers just coughed up $50,000 for the top-of-the-line system to automate 130 of their cameras. After three months of tuning it in (by the manufacturer, not the guards) they've turned off monitoring of 3/4 of their cameras because the false alarms were constant and the actual incidents were getting missed.

    By and large, I'd have to say that NYC is jumping the gun on this technology, probably by about a decade.

    --
    "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
  37. "A TOUT LE MONDE" Dave Mustaine & MegaDeath... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1984, & "The Symphony of Destruction"...

    "Perhaps you should try focussing your efforts on fixing the real problem?" - by dave420 (699308) on Saturday August 04, @07:29AM (#20112179)

    Yea, the Orwellian world... &, it's here (albeit 23 years late)... & Dave Mustaine of MegaDeath said it best:

    "You take a mortal man, & put him in control (watch him become a God - watch people's heads a roll). Just like pied piper, led rats thru the streets: Dance like marionettes, swaying to the symphony (of destruction!)"

    Fear... & ANY life insurance salesman can tell you? It SELLS, like NO tomorrow... & in this case? Can get abused to no end, think about it.

    Everytime I see things like this? I just think of the potential for abuses, FIRST, before I think of how its going to "defend me"!

    How's it going to do that, from a knife or bullet: IT'S NOT!

    ( ... & there is always potential for abuse of it, especially to keep us "nice, silent, sheep".

    E.G.-> Let's say, you decide to protest against Mr. Bush's "fine war" (which SHOULD have gotten us cheap gasoline prices for SOMEKIND of "ROI" for our taxes paying for it, but, has done ANYTHING but, alongside our soldiers dying & their families in grief for it, & more etc. et al)?

    It probably will be abused for things like this, FIRST, before it's used to "protects your freedoms":

    Protesting? Atlanta Police Department is watching

    http://foi.missouri.edu/firstamendment/protesting. html

    WTF! &, I am SURE this is NOT isolated to Atlanta, Ga. (my former home for years thru the 90's), either...

    People, I think, have forgotten, that 'freedom' (for whatever that word means, today)? Is NOT a right, you have to earn it AND defend it, starting with yourself first & in your IMMEDIATELY surrounding environment because face it: NOBODY, not even law enforcement, gives a shit about YOU personally, sad to say, even though we PAY them for it... &, to especially NOT live in fear & expect others to fight for you!

    (Because face it: One day, you're going to end up in a pine box, like it or not, so about dying? Man, it's going to happen, surveillance cameras or not).

    APK

    P.S.=> Yea, ok... "stay the course" alright... right into being caged, little BY little, eroding away your freedoms, & privacy (what little IS left) away! Keep dancing folks, to "the symphony of destruction" & waste, and erosion of your freedoms, Mr. Bush & Mr. Cheney are selling you, YOU, for your tax dollars, so he & his "oil baron" (& no-bid on the job Haliburton bullshit) pals can rob you blind, & enslave you... apk

  38. They Already Have It in NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There already is a network of surveillance cameras in New York, it's just not city-wide. But the whole West Village has these things; they're mounted on light posts and monitored by cops. It was part of Giuliani's unsuccessful ploy to drive marijuana out of Washington Square Park.

    Here's a link to a reprint of a Village Voice article; there have been others.

  39. Almost useless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In order to these network of cameras prevent terrorist attack, the police should already know a suspect face, a suspect license plate, etc. to trigger an alert before the disaster.

    Needless to say, that suicide bombers will be most likely not on a watch list (if they are there already, they are supposedly more closely followed anyway). It's easy to rent or buy a vehicle totally legally - again there is nothing to raise the flag before. Again, if there is a specific intelligence on specific persons there are much better ways to track them than generic surveillance network.

    Most importantly, cameras won't work to prevent suicidal terrorist attacks as a deterrent: the terrorist plans to die anyway, there is nothing to deter.

    It may help to investigate after the fact - but the terrorist should be really stupid to get on tape any outside connection beyond the suicidal cell members.

    What camera networks can do is to catch petty criminals, deadbeat parents, people who owe taxes, spouse cheaters, etc.

    Camera networks won't be very useful to prevent suicide bombs to go off. They are priceless though to make the public believe that the government does everything to protect the nation, they are priceless to award some businesses with great contracts, financed by the public.

    Most importantly, the images camera networks collect from suicide bombers are priceless when it comes to get them on television networks, where they are going to be played over and over again to condition the public to feel threatened and get public support for easier ways to limit freedoms.

  40. So what? by ibm1130 · · Score: 2, Informative

    The vast majority of police work is forensic in nature. So what if the cameras don't result in the suspect being nabbed while the crime is in progress. Whether the suspect is nabbed on the scene or elsewhere the fact remains they were identified and apprehended. Good luck arguing "I din't do it" when the camera has you on the scene and in the act. I don't expect privacy in a public place and if I'm somewhere I ought not to be doing something illegal any right to privacy is, I would argue, overidden by public safety concerns.
    Having said that I will guarantee that the cameras inq uestion will eventually be used to track vehicle presence in the city for revenue purposes. Its inevitable and utterly predictable.

    IBM

  41. Re:A natural progression by furball · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And there is the crux of the problem. You already accepted that terrorism is a crime (civilian issue).

    There are portions of the government that treats terrorism as a military matter (Republicans: Guantanamo Bay prisoners are military issue, they don't get civilian treatments like someone picked up for murder would) and others that treats terrorism as a crime (Democrats: Hey, why don't Guantanamo Bay prisoners have habeas corpus?).

    You need to be very careful of this dichotomy and read critically into what is stated. When crime and terrorism are identified separately, they're not doing it to be redundant. They're stated as a matter of belief about whether or not terrorism is a crime. For law enforcement folks, terrorism prevent is a matter of public safety. For the military types, terrorism is a matter of target identification so they can blow the terrorist away.

  42. I wouldn't carry a gun. Violence not the solution. by fantomas · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Thanks but no thanks pal. I'd not carry a gun even if I was allowed, and I'll vote against any law that says people should be able to carry guns. We have too many guns in the UK as it is, and I don't think the solution to violence is enabling everybody to hurt each other even more.

    If you could get those teenagers found, I'd not turn round to the police and say "please kneecap them". I don't think that will solve the problem. I think that way you end up with somebody who is less likely to get a job because they are disabled, I will have to pay their disability support and hospital fees for the next 30 years out of my taxes, and they are more likely to be a drain on society rather than a positive contributor, they are more likely to turn into a f*cked-up psycho of an adult.

    If punishment is required, punish them with something that helps the local neighbourhood rather than costs the neighbourhood money. Get them to do some community improvement work.

  43. At last by rastoboy29 · · Score: 2, Funny

    we'll finally be safe. Now if we could just get a network of surveillance cameras covering every square foot of the United States! That would be great.

  44. The Cams can take pics of collapsing bridges... by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

    Geez... our infrastructure is falling apart and instead of fixing the 80 year old steam lines, sewers, and electric cables it is time to invest in a DIGITAL CAMERA network. At least the odds are that a camera will get a good shot of the next exploding steam line, collapsing bridge, or truck eating sink hole. Well, unless of course the power is out because the electrical grid is down, but I am sure these cameras will have the finest battery backups.

    The Department of Homeland security budget has clearly achieved Borg status.

  45. Re:I wouldn't carry a gun. Violence not the soluti by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    I believe gun crime went up in the UK after they banned handguns.

    But yeah, it surely is terrible when law-abiding citizens are allowed to defend themselves. We can't have that. Violence is always wrong, except when done by misunderstood criminals who had a bad childhood. Then it's okay.

  46. I live in NYC... No thank you. by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

    I absolutely hate London's spy cam network. I find it sick. I expect this of England historically but i do not expect us to copy them! Didnt we fight to not be like England?

    America is dead. I like England in general, so i guess its not all that bad hehehe... I for one welcome our all seeing, all knowing, constitution killing, lobbiest controlled government.

  47. In unrelated news by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 2, Funny

    plain, nondescript hoodies to be the new hot fashion in the Big Apple!!

  48. One example please by th3rmite · · Score: 1

    Just one example, just one, showing how installing cameras in public places would be a bad idea.

    There are so many examples of why they are good, yet noone can site an example of how they are bad.

    If they were going to pass a law saying it is illegal for citizens to film each other in public, people would be screaming about how horrible it would be, but installing CCTV in public places where it could be used not only for preventing crime, but also as evidence, or for reviewing past security mistakes, is somehow not right?
    All I want is just one example...
    1. Re:One example please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are so many examples of why they are good, yet noone can site an example of how they are bad. It's not the cameras that are bad--it's the computers they feed into. I don't think most people have any clue at all what kind of software you can get for this stuff nowadays (with the dirt-cheap CPU time and all).

      Someone behind a desk somewhere could type in your name, and pull up your current location, a list of all the places you've been in the last month or so, streaming video of your parked car and possibly live video of you. Obviously, you'd better hope you've never done anything to piss this person off, because he now has the power to screw you over (anonymously, of course) any time he pleases--whether you break the law or not.
  49. Re:I wouldn't carry a gun. Violence not the soluti by fantomas · · Score: 1

    Gun crime in the UK is going up. But the question would be - was this directly due to handguns being outlawed, or are there other factors to consider? Can you prove a direct correlation? What about the massive amount of guns that started moving across Europe after the Soviet Union fell apart?

    Gun crime (and injuries and deaths) in the UK is still significantly lower than in countries where guns are commonly available for legal purchase.

    In the UK it is legal for "law-abiding citizens are allowed to defend themselves" - you are allowed to use "reasonable force". Very few people ever get prosecuted for using "unreasonable force".

    Personally I am glad that our school kids don't have to carry weapons just to go down to the sweetie shop.

    Buddy, it sounds like you've never had to face violence and think about it. I have. I didn't like it but I've not turned into a bitter vigilante as a result and I think that's probably a good thing for me and the society I live in. I don't want bloody vengeance. If it's good enough for Gandhi and Jesus Christ and a whole bunch of other folks people seem to respect, it's good enough for me. I think you're full of hot air. As they say, put up, or shut up. Tell me your story.

  50. London Metropolitan Police States by Danny+Rathjens · · Score: 1

    Anyone else read that as, Steven Swain from the London Metropolitan Police States? ;)

  51. Don't confuse privacy and anonymity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > We don't have privacy in public.

    True, but what most people are afraid of losing isn't privacy, it's anonymity.

    With the advent of ubiquitous cameras, given enough processing power to recognize people from the data they collect (we're not really there yet, but progress inexorably marches forward), we lose the ability to move in public without being tracked. Yes, it would be possible to do the same by having policemen review all of the video data, but that would be incredibly expensive... eventually it will be possible to do it automatically for very little cost. So, yes, things are changing, even if it is not a qualitative change but rather a quantitative one.

    As to fixing the police rather than controlling what weapons we give them, it's clear that the US Constitution is designed to protect the public against an untrusted police force and government. It would be foolish to just allow the police unlimited powers and hope that we'll manage to "fix" them (I can just see the few policemen reading Slashdot wincing)....

  52. Lol. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did the founding fathers just say "eh... fuck it. what can we do?" Heh, they didn't say "fuck it. what can we do?" they said "one day we will be fucked, so we'll compartmentalize corruption and powermongering with seperation of powers."

    How's that worked out?

    QMal and Screwmaster make a good point, presuming the executive (the cops) to be corruption free is rather pointless. Systems must be designed with corruption as a given, hence all the proverbs like 'trust, but verify' and quaint notions like the 4th Amendment (checks and balances).
  53. Re:I wouldn't carry a gun. Violence not the soluti by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    Buddy, it sounds like you've never had to face violence and think about it.

    You're dodging the issue by appealing to irrelevant bullshit. People have a right to defend themselves regardless of how much or how little I've experienced violence.

    I didn't like it but I've not turned into a bitter vigilante as a result and I think that's probably a good thing for me and the society I live in. I don't want bloody vengeance. If it's good enough for Gandhi and Jesus Christ and a whole bunch of other folks people seem to respect, it's good enough for me. I think you're full of hot air. As they say, put up, or shut up. Tell me your story.

    And now you're suddenly talking about vigilantism which has absolutely nothing to do with this.
  54. Re:I wouldn't carry a gun. Violence not the soluti by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As you can see, well meaning American, gentlemen like this fool are the reason why us poor bastards in the UK will never have guns. Too damn many of us are afraid of them. It's a sorry state of affairs, but I can't see anything we can do about it. Please stop your country turning to shit so I can abandon this one and move to yours.

  55. random message by rjshields · · Score: 1

    To those who mocked the camera situation in the UK with 1984 jokes, I would like to say a big "fuck you". Oh, and watch out for the telescreens. Thanks for listening.

    --
    In this world nothing is certain but death, taxes and flawed car analogies.
  56. Re:I wouldn't carry a gun. Violence not the soluti by fantomas · · Score: 1

    Nobody's stopping you leaving buddy... I believe there are 8 flights a day UK ->USA. What's keeping you?

  57. This is why I got the hell out of NYC by SAABMaven · · Score: 1

    City Government are not competent to use such a system for any purpose other than generating revenue and growing the cancer of a bureaucracy still further.

  58. Leave cameras on the street in NYC? by herbierobinson · · Score: 2, Funny

    I wonder how they plan on keeping the cameras from being stolen? :-)

    --
    An engineer who ran for Congress. http://herbrobinson.us
  59. Re:I wouldn't carry a gun. Violence not the soluti by jrumney · · Score: 1

    I believe there are 8 flights a day UK ->USA

    8? There are 4 a day LHR->JFK, and 5 a day LHR->EWR. And I haven't even started on other US destinations or other UK airports with flights to the US.