Do you approve of the use of surveillance cameras in public places as a crime fighting tool?

Yes
Total votes: 11 (21%)
No
Total votes: 33 (63%)
Waffles
Total votes: 8 (15%)
Total votes: 52

Public Surveillance Cameras

91
andteater wrote:in other news, scott...you sum up my complete point. if the big bad evil government decides that they want to come after you and frame you or track you and then eat your babies, they have the power to do so and then cover it up...cameras or not...


So we should just roll over and accept that? I know it's a lot easier to do but sometimes what's easy isn't what's right.

andteater wrote:its not even a cameras issue. its a "there is a possibility that those in power will abuse their power" issue - and in that case, it comes down to any tool they might have at their disposal...hell, some cops may turn out to abuse their power, i say take away their guns! etc. etc.


Which is why we should be a lot more cautious in giving them more tools that have the potential for abuse.

andteater wrote:you can sit around and worry about it all day or you can just go about your business, resigned to the fact that those in power can be evil, corrupt bastards and that in essence, we're all fucked and that it might just be a better use of time to try and surround yourself with things that combat those awful truths (friends, family, cats that dont have dingleberries dragging on the floor behind them, music, art) than sit around waiting for the man coming to get you.


No one is coming to get me and I don't spend my time thinking they are. In fact I spend my free time surrounded by friends and family doing things that I enjoy. I even like what I do for a living. Not that how I spend my time is any of your business.

Anyway, you completely mischaracterize me and my position in an attempt to discredit both as "paranoid".

It would be nice if I could leave this world a better place then I found it. If all I can do is argue my perspective in the hope that I will at least get some others to think more deeply on issues I care about then that is what I will do.

I object to the cameras for the reasons outlined below from Bradly's excellent link-

The ACLU wrote:1. VIDEO SURVEILLANCE HAS NOT BEEN PROVEN EFFECTIVE
The implicit justification for the recent push to increase video surveillance is the threat of terrorist attacks. But suicide attackers are clearly not deterred by video cameras - and may even be attracted to the television coverage cameras can ensure - and the expense of an extensive video surveillance system such as Britain's - which sucks up approximately 20 percent of that nation's criminal justice budget - far exceeds the limited benefits that the system may provide in investigating attacks or attempted attacks after the fact (see fact sheet on Surveillance Cameras and the Attempted London Attacks).

The real reason cameras are usually deployed is to reduce much pettier crimes. But it has not even been demonstrated that they can do that. In Britain, where cameras have been extensively deployed in public places, sociologists studying the issue have found that they have not reduced crime. "Once the crime and offence figures were adjusted to take account of the general downward trend in crimes and offences," criminologists found in one study, "reductions were noted in certain categories but there was no evidence to suggest that the cameras had reduced crime overall in the city centre." A 2005 study for the British Home Office also found that cameras did not cut crime or the fear of crime (as had a 2002 study, also for the British government).

In addition, U.S. government experts on security technology, noting that "monitoring video screens is both boring and mesmerizing," have foundin experiments that "after only 20 minutes of watching and evaluating monitor screens, the attention of most individuals has degenerated to well below acceptable levels."

2. CCTV IS SUSCEPTIBLE TO ABUSE
One problem with creating such a powerful surveillance system is that experience tells us it will inevitably be abused. There are five ways that surveillance-camera systems are likely to be misused:

Criminal abuse
Surveillance systems present law enforcement "bad apples" with a tempting opportunity for criminal misuse. In 1997, for example, a top-ranking police official in Washington, DC was caught using police databases to gather information on patrons of a gay club. By looking up the license plate numbers of cars parked at the club and researching the backgrounds of the vehicles' owners, he tried to blackmail patrons who were married. Imagine what someone like that could do with a citywide spy-camera system.

Institutional abuse
Sometimes, bad policies are set at the top, and an entire law enforcement agency is turned toward abusive ends. That is especially prone to happen in periods of social turmoil and intense conflict over government policies. During the Civil Rights movement and the Vietnam War, for example, the FBI - as well as many individual police departments around the nation - conducted illegal operations to spy upon and harass political activists who were challenging racial segregation and the Vietnam War. This concern is especially justified since we are in some respects enduring a similar period of conflict today.

Abuse for personal purposes
Powerful surveillance tools also create temptations to abuse them for personal purposes. An investigation by the Detroit Free Press, for example, showed that a database available to Michigan law enforcement was used by officers to help their friends or themselves stalk women, threaten motorists after traffic altercations, and track estranged spouses.

Discriminatory targeting
Video camera systems are operated by humans who bring to the job all their existing prejudices and biases. In Great Britain, camera operators have been found to focus disproportionately on people of color. According to a sociological study of how the systems were operated, "Black people were between one-and-a-half and two-and-a-half times more likely to be surveilled than one would expect from their presence in the population."

Voyeurism
Experts studying how the camera systems in Britain are operated have also found that the mostly male (and probably bored) operators frequently use the cameras to voyeuristically spy on women. Fully one in 10 women were targeted for entirely voyeuristic reasons, the researchers found. Many incidents have been reported in the United States. In one, New York City police in a helicopter supposedly monitoring the crowds at the 2004 Republican Convention trained an infrared video camera on an amorous couple enjoying the nighttime "privacy" of their rooftop balcony.

3. THE LACK OF LIMITS OR CONTROLS ON CAMERAS USE
Advanced surveillance systems such as CCTV need to be subject to checks and balances. Because the technology has evolved so quickly, however, checks and balances to prevent the kinds of abuses outlined above don't exist. Two elements in particular are missing:

A consensus on limits for the capability of public CCTV systems.
Unfortunately, history has shown that surveillance technologies put in place for one purpose inevitably expand into other uses. And with video technology likely to continue advancing, the lack of any clear boundaries for what CCTV systems should be able to do poses a significant danger.

In just the past several years, many cities, including Washington, New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, have for the first time installed significant numbers of police-operated cameras trainined on public spaces. And once these surveillance facilities are put in place, police departments will be in a position to increase the quality of its technology and the number of its cameras - and will inevitably be tempted or pressured to do so. Do we want the authorities installing high-resolution cameras that can read a pamphlet from a mile away? Cameras equipped to detect wavelengths outside the visible spectrum, allowing night vision or see-through vision? Cameras equipped with facial recognition, like those that have been installed in airports and even on the streets ofTampa, Florida? Cameras augmented with other forms of artificial intelligence, such as those deployed in Chicago?

As long as there is no clear consensus about where we draw the line on surveillance to protect American values, public CCTV is in danger of evolving into a surveillance monster.

Legally enforceable rules for the operation of such systems.
A societal consensus about how cameras should be used is important, but in the end we are a nation of laws and rights that have their root in law. While the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution offers some protection against video searches conducted by the police, there are currently no general, legally enforceable rules to limit privacy invasions and protect against abuse of CCTV systems. Rules are needed to establish a clear public understanding of such issues as whether video signals are recorded, under what conditions, and how long are they retained; what the criteria are for access to archived video by other government agencies, or by the public; how the rules would be verified and enforced; and what punishments would apply to violators.

There have long been well-established rules governing the audio recording of individuals without their consent (there is a reason surveillance cameras never have microphones). It makes no sense that we don't have equivalent laws for video recording.

4. VIDEO SURVEILLANCE WILL HAVE A CHILLING EFFECT ON PUBLIC LIFE
The growing presence of public cameras will bring subtle but profound changes to the character of our public spaces. When citizens are being watched by the authorities - or aware they might be watched at any time - they are more self-conscious and less free-wheeling. As syndicated columnist Jacob Sullum has pointed out, "knowing that you are being watched by armed government agents tends to put a damper on things. You don't want to offend them or otherwise call attention to yourself." Eventually, he warns, "people may learn to be careful about the books and periodicals they read in public, avoiding titles that might alarm unseen observers. They may also put more thought into how they dress, lest they look like terrorists, gang members, druggies or hookers." Indeed, the studies of cameras in Britain found that people deemed to be "out of time and place" with the surroundings were subjected to prolonged surveillance.

THE BOTTOM LINE: A LACK OF PROPORTION BETWEEN BENEFITS AND RISKS
Like any intrusive technology, the benefits of deploying public video cameras must be balanced against the costs and dangers. This technology (a) has the potential change the core experience of going out in public in America because of its chilling effect on citizens, (b) carries very real dangers of abuse and "mission creep," and (c) would not significantly protect us against terrorism. Given that, its benefits - preventing at most a few street crimes, and probably none - are disproportionately small.
it's not the length, it's the gersch

Public Surveillance Cameras

92
beloveless wrote:
El Protoolio wrote:
beloveless wrote:From the ACLU sites reasons against Cameras

Discriminatory targeting
Video camera systems are operated by humans who bring to the job all their existing prejudices and biases. In Great Britain, camera operators have been found to focus disproportionately on people of color. According to a sociological study of how the systems were operated, "Black people were between one-and-a-half and two-and-a-half times more likely to be surveilled than one would expect from their presence in the population."

ME...

Anybody doing ANY job brings their existing prejudices and biases and this form of bias is not relevant where I live.
In Baltimore, where I am, the overwhelming majority of street dealing and crime is committed by "people of color". "People of color" also comprise the majority population in Baltimore City therefore surveillance SHOULD be focused on "People of Color " in Baltimore City.


You could not have made a better example for how these cameras are an abomination ripe for abuse.



How so..if the majority is observing the majority how is said observation considered biased?


The assumption that someone is criminal because of the color of their skin is a biased assumption. I know from experience and research that cops, like any average person, can be racist. If they are only watching black people because they think only "black people are criminals" then the laws broken by other people will remain unenforced. This assumption could also be used to unjustifiably harrass segments of the population solely because of the color of their skin. That wouldn't be equal justice. That would be abuse.
it's not the length, it's the gersch

Public Surveillance Cameras

93
space junk wrote:I am suspicious of Police and government. I find most of them to be creepy cunts. Cameras filming streets don't make this any worse or better. They're just cameras. Operated by creeps. Filming stuff.


I'm genuinely glad to hear that you are suspicious of the cops and the government, because I believe that we all should be on general principle. I would suggest to you that your discomfort isn't just a matter of personal preference to be free of "creepy cunts", but a more basic and more important impulse, whose expression in law is the basis of a decently open and free society.

space junk wrote:As I suspect you are aware, this type of argument is called a reductio ad absurdum. It's lazy, unnecessary and has no place in intelligent debate.


What limiting principle do you propose, then? If our suspicions of authority aren't sufficient grounds to limit its scope, what is?

If you dislike surveillance cameras but acknowledge that they help catch bad guys, what else are you willing to endure so that bad guys get caught? Where do you strike the balance between effective law enforcement and personal freedom, and on what basis?

space junk wrote:Police are going to fuck with people and shoot them regardless of cameras. If anything, the cameras have been a powerful tool in catching police doing dodgy stuff. There are many examples of this. I think one can even be found in the Chicago Police thread, as I recall.


You're right in that cameras watching the police, mounted on their dashboards etc. are an important tool for breaking the blue wall of silence and identifying abuses. That they're going to shoot people regardless is, incidentally, a very good reason not to trust the police to continually observe us.

Cameras indiscriminately trained on the public at large, however, abrogate everyone's presumption of innocence and freedom from the hazards (not to mention the annoyance) of continual police surveillance. They work for us, so we get to look over their shoulder all the time -- not the other way around.

space junk wrote:Again: hand-wringing panic-mongering. You're equating cameras on streets with "arbitrary thuggery". I say this is a drastic overreaction.


It's panic, hand-wringing and overreaction about crime and terrorism that has gotten us to a level where continual video observation of the public is widely accepted as a small price to pay for a (questionable) increase in personal safety. The arbitrariness of the camera eye is a cause for serious concern, and if it won't even prevent police from shooting unarmed innocents we have good reason to be fearful of what it will permit the police to do.

Public Surveillance Cameras

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El Protoolio wrote:So we should just roll over and accept that? I know it's a lot easier to do but sometimes what's easy isn't what's right.


you should accept that the cameras are out there. yes. because they are, and i dont think its realistic to think that they're coming down anytime soon.

maybe you can come up with a plan of policing the police, which i'm all for...but even that is highly unlikely.

El Protoolio wrote:Which is why we should be a lot more cautious in giving them more tools that have the potential for abuse.


the point is that any technological "tool" has the potential for abuse. and with any technology, you can sit and extrapolate all of these wild things that those in power can do to abuse it...

El Protoolio wrote:Anyway, you completely mischaracterize me and my position in an attempt to discredit both as "paranoid".


your posts on this topic do that for me. they're all based on this premice that somebody MIGHT do something evil with this technology they have access to...they might stalk political foes! they might bribe guys walking out of gay bars! they might check out hot chicks sunbathing on the roofs downtown...i already two of out of those three things, all without cameras!

El Protoolio wrote:The implicit justification for the recent push to increase video surveillance is the threat of terrorist attacks.


this is true...i dont think surveillance cameras are very effective at stopping terrorists...in fact, i dont think many things are. if people are willing to die for a cause, you're pretty much fucked.

that being said, terrorists may have a tough time entering an area with a well designed full security system that involves CCTV equipment...

El Protoolio wrote:In addition, U.S. government experts on security technology, noting that "monitoring video screens is both boring and mesmerizing," have foundin experiments that "after only 20 minutes of watching and evaluating monitor screens, the attention of most individuals has degenerated to well below acceptable levels."


this can be true, which is where my problem with current surveillance systems exist...that too many are poorly designed. a well designed system takes advantage of alarm conditions to only show video of where things are happening or software which highlites certain "suspicious activities" on the screen, making sure that operators are more likely to notice these things rather than zone out....

El Protoolio wrote:Surveillance systems present law enforcement "bad apples" with a tempting opportunity for criminal misuse. In 1997, for example, a top-ranking police official in Washington, DC was caught using police databases to gather information on patrons of a gay club. By looking up the license plate numbers of cars parked at the club and researching the backgrounds of the vehicles' owners, he tried to blackmail patrons who were married. Imagine what someone like that could do with a citywide spy-camera system.


same shit could happen pre-camera system and would probably be alot easier doing it the old fashioned way...

El Protoolio wrote:Sometimes, bad policies are set at the top, and an entire law enforcement agency is turned toward abusive ends.


if a bad cop wants to be abusive, he's going to be abusive...it has nothing to do with the cameras...

El Protoolio wrote:Abuse for personal purposes
Powerful surveillance tools also create temptations to abuse them for personal purposes. An investigation by the Detroit Free Press, for example, showed that a database available to Michigan law enforcement was used by officers to help their friends or themselves stalk women, threaten motorists after traffic altercations, and track estranged spouses.


again...even if they didnt have cameras, they'd find another way to do it...

El Protoolio wrote:Discriminatory targeting
Video camera systems are operated by humans who bring to the job all their existing prejudices and biases. In Great Britain, camera operators have been found to focus disproportionately on people of color. According to a sociological study of how the systems were operated, "Black people were between one-and-a-half and two-and-a-half times more likely to be surveilled than one would expect from their presence in the population."


i dont think that people are really "operating" these cameras...but i've explained before about how these systems are typically set up.

El Protoolio wrote:Voyeurism
Experts studying how the camera systems in Britain are operated have also found that the mostly male (and probably bored) operators frequently use the cameras to voyeuristically spy on women. Fully one in 10 women were targeted for entirely voyeuristic reasons, the researchers found. Many incidents have been reported in the United States. In one, New York City police in a helicopter supposedly monitoring the crowds at the 2004 Republican Convention trained an infrared video camera on an amorous couple enjoying the nighttime "privacy" of their rooftop balcony.


thats pretty hot.

El Protoolio wrote:Do we want the authorities installing high-resolution cameras that can read a pamphlet from a mile away? Cameras equipped to detect wavelengths outside the visible spectrum, allowing night vision or see-through vision?


not gonna happen. by the time that technology exists that allows cameras to read a pamphlet a mile away, your ipod is going to be able to film the secret police dragging away your wife and children for political dissent, all in HDTV quality video and 24/96 audio...

El Protoolio wrote:Rules are needed to establish a clear public understanding of such issues as whether video signals are recorded, under what conditions, and how long are they retained; what the criteria are for access to archived video by other government agencies, or by the public; how the rules would be verified and enforced; and what punishments would apply to violators.

There have long been well-established rules governing the audio recording of individuals without their consent (there is a reason surveillance cameras never have microphones). It makes no sense that we don't have equivalent laws for video recording.


i agree completely. HOWEVER, do you think that the big evil man globalcom zionist police state gestapo members will adhere to these rules that you propose (and i know that these are all quotes from another page and you didnt neccesarily "write them") - if they're part of some evil conglamorate, i dont think telling them "you cant use these cameras for evil" is going to do anything..

El Protoolio wrote:4. VIDEO SURVEILLANCE WILL HAVE A CHILLING EFFECT ON PUBLIC LIFE
The growing presence of public cameras will bring subtle but profound changes to the character of our public spaces. When citizens are being watched by the authorities - or aware they might be watched at any time - they are more self-conscious and less free-wheeling. As syndicated columnist Jacob Sullum has pointed out, "knowing that you are being watched by armed government agents tends to put a damper on things. You don't want to offend them or otherwise call attention to yourself." Eventually, he warns, "people may learn to be careful about the books and periodicals they read in public, avoiding titles that might alarm unseen observers. They may also put more thought into how they dress, lest they look like terrorists, gang members, druggies or hookers." Indeed, the studies of cameras in Britain found that people deemed to be "out of time and place" with the surroundings were subjected to prolonged surveillance.


ridiculous. anybody who lives in the city and rides the train/bus or works in a major office building is already tracked everyday by video and a trail of data (from your access control system at work, your credit card, your ipass, etc) - are you walking around feeling awkward about being watched?

god bless,
andyk
LingLing - www.myspace.com/linglingchicago

Public Surveillance Cameras

95
I am against the cameras based on my principal beliefs about how we should treat each other and my understanding of the philosophical foundations of this country.

You are free to disagree with those principals and point out the numerous ways that those philosophies are violated or how they can be violated without use of the cameras. This will not change the fact that these cameras, along with all the other examples of corruption and surveillance you point out, go against those principals and philisophies.

There is no contradiction here. I don't like any of the ways my movements and activites are tracked. I wasn't around when most of them were introduced. I am around for this.

I am wise enough to understand that there are people and events that go against all of these beliefs and that nothing I can say or do will instantly change that. If I didn't understand that fact I would be on the corner wearing a sandwich board and screaming into a megaphone about the end of the world instead of debating on a message board during work.
it's not the length, it's the gersch

Public Surveillance Cameras

96
El Protoolio wrote:
beloveless wrote:
El Protoolio wrote:
beloveless wrote:From the ACLU sites reasons against Cameras

Discriminatory targeting
Video camera systems are operated by humans who bring to the job all their existing prejudices and biases. In Great Britain, camera operators have been found to focus disproportionately on people of color. According to a sociological study of how the systems were operated, "Black people were between one-and-a-half and two-and-a-half times more likely to be surveilled than one would expect from their presence in the population."

ME...

Anybody doing ANY job brings their existing prejudices and biases and this form of bias is not relevant where I live.
In Baltimore, where I am, the overwhelming majority of street dealing and crime is committed by "people of color". "People of color" also comprise the majority population in Baltimore City therefore surveillance SHOULD be focused on "People of Color " in Baltimore City.


You could not have made a better example for how these cameras are an abomination ripe for abuse.



How so..if the majority is observing the majority how is said observation considered biased?


The assumption that someone is criminal because of the color of their skin is a biased assumption. I know from experience and research that cops, like any average person, can be racist. If they are only watching black people because they think only "black people are criminals" then the laws broken by other people will remain unenforced. This assumption could also be used to unjustifiably harrass segments of the population solely because of the color of their skin. That wouldn't be equal justice. That would be abuse.


You did not even read my post. My point is that Blacks ARE NOT a Minority in Baltimore City therefore one cannot claim that it is racially biased for a MAJORITY BLACK population to perform surveillance upon the MAJORITY BLACK population. The only assumption made in my claims is that because Most people are Black people in Baltimore City than it would be safe to statistically assume that most Crimes would also be committed by Black people. Just as most apartments are rented by Black people and most of the children in school are Black because most people in Baltimore are Black.
I'll make it real easy for you

Majority population performs the Majority of all human activity.
Crime is a human activity.
The Majority of the human activity known as crime will be committed by the Majority population.
The Majority Population of Baltimore is Black
Blacks commit the majority of crimes in Baltimore.
To observe Blacks potentially committing crimes in Baltimore cannot be considered racially biased because the majority of crimes are in fact committed by blacks.
To target someone specifically because they are Black would be unfair however in Baltimore they are targeting the assholes who happen to be lurking the streets of the shit ghetto all day and night, who in Baltimore happen to be black because..wait for it.. most people ARE BLACK.
I know its amazing to think that a Black man is arrested somewhere not because the White man was bringing him down but just maybe he is actually a piece of shit, violent, aggressive, sub human criminal who belongs locked in a cage.

Public Surveillance Cameras

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El Protoolio wrote:[...]I tried to respond to space junk but he prefers to dismiss my argument as "baseless paranoia" instead of actually engaging in a discussion of what liberty means and how these cameras relate to that concept. He seems to think that ideas don't matter and I am pointing out that ideas do matter since ideas are what both of our nation's laws and constitutions are based on and that these cameras spit in the face of those ideas. Enlightenment thinkers and the USA's founders must be spinning in their graves over this issue.


From page one I have been interested to hear your opinions about this. I still am. But if all you can come up with is big, vague concepts like "liberty" and "freedom", then I feel your contributions are even more content free than mine. Ideas and concepts are important to me, but not when they're just thrown around like buzzwords with no specific or useful bearing on the subject at hand. That just comes off like a teenager whining about "censorship", or "oppression." (Or even a politician spouting off about some "War On Terror" - what terror, exactly? What war?)

What other people have done in this thread is offer tangible points for discussion. The closest you've come to that is belatedly pasting Bradley R. Weissenberger's link.

BRW's link is well written, but like many contributions to this thread, it doesn't make any allowance for the fact that these cameras help bring criminals to justice. If that doesn't mean anything to you, then we are definitely at ideological odds with each other.

You can quote statistics all you like. Try talking to the victim of a brutal attack whose assailant was brought to justice almost solely because of a street surveillance camera. Do that and then tell me these cameras do no good.

Or just keep banging on about liberty, and how these cameras are "just the beginning." Whichever you prefer.

Public Surveillance Cameras

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Rick Reuben wrote:From the Boston Globe on Sunday. No shortage of money for Big Brother.
boston globe 8-12-07 wrote:WASHINGTON -- The Department of Homeland Security is funneling millions of dollars to local governments nationwide for purchasing high-tech video camera networks, accelerating the rise of a "surveillance society" in which the sense of freedom that stems from being anonymous in public will be lost, privacy rights advocates warn.

The department will not say how much of its taxpayer-funded grants have gone to cameras. But a Globe search of local newspapers and congressional press releases shows that a large number of new surveillance systems, costing at least tens and probably hundreds of millions of dollars, are being simultaneously installed around the country as part of homeland security grants.



Many of them to be trained on crumbling bridges, no doubt!
tocharian wrote:Cheese fries vs nonexistence. Duh.

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