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An Imaginative Use For CCTVs

An anonymous reader writes "Everyone knows we're being watched by CCTVs everywhere — particularly in the UK — and virtually everyone (at least on Slashdot) complains about that fact. But have you ever stopped to consider the ways you can use all those CCTVs to your advantage? The Get Out Clause, an unsigned band from Manchester in the UK, did just that; they played in front of 80 different CCTVs around Manchester, and then asked for the video via Freedom of Information Act letters. (About 25% of the CCTV owners complied with the law and turned them over.) The result isn't too bad."

2 of 191 comments (clear)

  1. Is it just me... by ChowRiit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is it just me, or is the important part of this not "band makes music video" but than 75% of organisations will deny a legitimate request under the Freedom of Information Act? Surely someone should be investigating this...

  2. Re:Data Protection? by asnare · · Score: 5, Insightful
    A common theme for privacy/data protection legislation is that the person whom the data is about has the right to:
    1. Access that data;
    2. Correct any mistakes in the data.

    I get the feeling that the latter is normally the main goal here, but the former is required for that to be tenable.

    Specifically in the UK, according to Wikipedia's entry on the Data Protection Act:

    The Data Protection Act creates rights for those who have their data stored, and responsibilities for those who store or collect personal data.

    The person who has their data processed has the right to

    • View the data an organisation holds on them, for a small fee, known as 'subject access'
    • Request that incorrect information be corrected. If the company ignores the request, a court can order the data to be corrected or destroyed, and in some cases compensation can be awarded.
    • Require that data is not used in a way which causes damage or distress.
    • Require that their data is not used for direct marketing.

    So they may have tried to use the 'subject access' thing. Wikipedia also mentions that costs cannot exceed £10.