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New York To Test Facial Recognition Cameras At 'Crossing Points' (vocativ.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Vocativ: In a 35-minute speech detailing a landmark $100 billion investment into state infrastructure, largely focused on New York City and Long Island, Governor Andrew Cuomo made a number of promises that would thrill New Yorkers, like the promise of a renovated Penn Station, called Penn-Farley, a direct train from there to LaGuardia Airport, and the completion of the long-awaited Second Avenue Line. Oh, and facial recognition cameras around the city, he said: "At each crossing, and at structurally sensitive points on bridges and tunnels, advanced cameras and sensors will be installed to read license plates and test emerging facial recognition software and equipment." "We're going to be using this in Penn-Farley and we also want to be testing it in bridges and crossings system," he added. On the matter of facial recognition cameras, Cuomo was shy on details. It's unclear how many cameras will be deployed, which agencies will have access to them, what defines a crossing, how citizens' photos will be stored, and what photo databases will be used to compare against the faces of the millions of people who drive into the city. In his speech, Cuomo referenced the cameras as necessary for New York to adapt to 21st century security threats. "In this age of terrorist activity and lone wolves, if you look at points of vulnerability you'll go to our tunnels and to our bridges. So really they have to be reimagined for a new reality," he said.

6 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  2. Could you perhaps... by Type44Q · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Could you perhaps burn-out the CCD's/CMOS sensors with a powerful-enough laser?

  3. Time by rtkluttz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For ski masks year round from everybody just to say Fuck you very much.

    --
    Digital is, by definition, imperfect. Analog is the way to go.
    1. Re:Time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      or one of the baseball hats with IR LEDs in the brim

  4. Why by Smiddi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The question is "why"? - you have a higher chance of dying from a bee sting or a lightning strike, why not address the higher risks first?

  5. Re:Reimagined for a new reality by doug141 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    no one ever seizes power with the intention of relinquishing it.

    Said King George III about George Washington:
            The actual resignation of his command, having made peace between the civil and military powers of the new country -- and, in an emotional ceremony, bidden farewell to his officers on December 4, 1783 -- took place in Annapolis, Maryland, on December 23, when he formally handed back to Congress his commission as commander in chief, which they had given him in June 1775. He said he would never again hold public office. He had his horse waiting at the door, and he took the road to Mount Vernon the next day.
            No one who knew Washington was surprised. Everyone else, in varying degrees, was astonished at this singular failure of the corruption of power to work. And, indeed, it was a rare moment in history. In London, George III qustioned the American-born painter Benjamin West what Washington would do now he had won the war. "Oh," said West, "they say he will return to his farm." "If he does that," said the king, "he will be the greatest man in the world."