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Watching the Police: Will Two-Way Surveillance Reduce Crime?

An anonymous reader writes "As surveillance technologies have matured in both their sophistication and usage, some are starting to ask the question: is it time we start using them to watch the watchers? The proliferation of dashboard cameras has reduced liability costs, provided valuable evidence, and made police officers safer. The next progression would naturally be for the camera to move out of the car and onto the officer's uniform itself. In The Verge appears a fascinating report about the company behind the non-lethal stun guns that have become commonplace around the world, Taser International, which has set out to transform policing once again – this time, with Axon Flex, a head-mounted camera with a twelve-hour battery life that officers can use to record interactions. The device is constantly on, but it only captures video of the thirty seconds before its wearer begins using it, and then both video and audio while police are speaking to a citizen. Footage is then uploaded to a cloud-based service where it can be accessed by the police department. It includes an audit trail to reveal who has accessed the information and when."

8 of 309 comments (clear)

  1. The ONLY Way this should work is... by SirGeek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    if 100% of the footage is uploaded/published on a regular basis.

    Remove the ability of a department to "lose" the info. Perhaps even send the raw footage to the AFL-CIO

    1. Re:The ONLY Way this should work is... by CanHasDIY · · Score: 5, Insightful

      if 100% of the footage is uploaded/published on a regular basis.

      Remove the ability of a department to "lose" the info. Perhaps even send the raw footage to the AFL-CIO

      Also, change

      Footage is then uploaded to a cloud-based service where it can be accessed by the police department

      to

      Footage is then uploaded to a cloud-based service where it can be accessed by the public

      It seems apparent that Internal Affairs, AKA the "Office of Paid Vacations," is a fucking joke in most municipalities.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    2. Re:The ONLY Way this should work is... by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 5, Funny

      I hate it when vagrants abuse their power. They do it in such a flagrant way.

      --


      "Lame" - Galaxar
    3. Re:The ONLY Way this should work is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Appeasement isn't a very sound foreign policy either, Prime Minister Chamberlain...

    4. Re:The ONLY Way this should work is... by Genda · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Time and time again its been shown that the very act of policing changes human behavior, the impact it has on human psychology is profound and predictable. People who are responsible for "controlling", "managing" or "policing" groups of people that have been psychologically "Othered", tend to use unacceptable force, show dramatic loss of sympathy, empathy and compassion, and in general commit the kind nasty primate behavior we all have taboos against doing in normal polite society.

      The requirement is to first weed sociopaths and psychopaths out of police work, not doing that is a recipe for disaster. Next police education should include STRONG training in human behavior with a healthy shot of brain science and an appreciation for how the human brain (and its impact on the human mind) is impacted by a steady diet of "Keeping the Bad Guys at bay." There should be regular counseling, absolutely should be recorded police behavior, if nothing else to get a better handle on keeping our police mentally healthy and operationally effective. By the way, the police don't happen in a vacuum. The same ultra moralistic, hyper vigilant, religious rite (spelling intended) American subcultures that have put express lanes on their death rows and don't even blink twice at the fact that they've done a piss pour job of sorting the innocent from the guilty (the common heard refrain is let Gawd sort them out), leads to police that shoot first and worry about your human rights maybe later? I'm not saying that a New York officer who decides to break a broom handle off in some poor innocent Haitian's rectum isn't an atrocity deserving of some version of human life sacrifice. I am saying that there seem to be entire regions of the U.S. where public attitudes point to seriously questionable ethics and commonly result in atrocious behavior as common course, particularly by authorities.

      Others have mentioned public Ombudsman Programs, awesome ideas. Recording people's behavior to enhance accountability, equally awesome. Holding society at large to greater responsibility, makes me tear up with happiness. We get the services we manage, and take accountability for. No accountability, no service (or worse, disservice.) Most of all, we train people to be great. We explain that correction isn't being judged as wrong, its the control process required to get anything from point A to point B (its simply steering.) Treat the police great, their work is difficult, dangerous and seldom appreciated. Manage their humanity, the good, the bad and the ugly. Take care of them, so they can take care of us. By the way, while you're getting the police perfect, you also want to start working on the political system, education, public sector employees, the legal justice system and doctors.

      We've pretty much proven self regulation is virtually no regulation at all. I welcome the day we have an IBM Watson for the general administration of large professional/government bodies. By all means leave the disposition of people to people, but put a computer in the mix looking out for misconduct and dirty deeds done cheap . Adding that and systemic transparency suggests a golden age of rational human services right around the corner! And yes, expect foot dragging, nobody willing relinquishes control.

  2. Just say'in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The device is constantly on, but it only captures video of the thirty seconds before its wearer begins using it, and then both video and audio while police are speaking to a citizen.

    But not when beating the citizen? Or violating his rights?

  3. Ubiquitous surveillance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ubiquitous surveillance of everyone by everyone is inevitable. Dashcams and google glass are merely the first. Cams will become smaller, batteries will become smaller, internet will become faster, and everyone will automatically store what they see in their cloud of preference.

    Finally witness statements, which are proven to be unreliable, can be backed up by actual evidence.

    Hurrah for progress.

  4. Taser International is the wrong group to do this by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Any group surveiling the cops shouldn't be selling those cops stuff. "Hey, the XYZ PD just ordered another $500k of merch from us, I think we can 'lose' that embarrassing video."

    Taser International is a bunch of evil fuckwads who've made their bankrolls selling lethal electrical torture devices to police. Their irresponsible marketing has lead to an increase in the use of excessive force by cops. My trust in them is zero.

    --
    Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
    You cannot wash away blood with blood