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Virginia Beach Goes For Facial Recognition 48

Raven42rac writes " It appears that my hometown, Virginia Beach, after summarily rejecting those ridiculous facial recognition cameras, has recently become the second city in the nation to use them. (Yay we're number 2, pun intended.) Citing the ubiquitous 'everything is different now after 9-11' defense that has become ever popular in yanking away our rights and liberties. The whole shebang is explained in this article from my local newspaper's website, and unlike some online newspapers, this one is completely free, and no registration is required."
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Virginia Beach Goes For Facial Recognition

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  • good economy
    Police, in a news briefing Monday, insisted the surveillance system poses no threat to ordinary, law-abiding citizens, with Deputy Chief Gregory Mullen adding, ``We may not ever make an arrest with the system.''
  • This sucks man (Score:3, Insightful)

    by GreyWolf3000 ( 468618 ) on Tuesday September 10, 2002 @02:01PM (#4230618) Journal

    Yeah this seems to be a disturbing trend since 911. Our borders are wide open for people to come in (I'm not saying that's good or bad) and goverment control of everyday citizens is all that they can come up with.

    The Patriot Act is one of the most stifling pieces of legislation I've ever seen. From a conservative standpoint, I feel the Republican party has completely 180'ed in the last year. Government control will not help. Mr. Bush, who I am not happy to say I voted for, has either kept or enlarged pretty much every fluffy program Clinton created. I'm not saying that they're all bad (they're irrelevant to my point), but the bicameral support promised after 9/11 has turned into the entire government encroaching on civil liberties. In fact, I hope that some Democrats may even agree with me here.

    We have to learn that there are people in this world that will do some pretty destructive things, and that we're never wholly secure. The EU, Canada, and the US are all providing security at the cost of our freedom. Don't do it--it's a bad deal. And when and if the next attack comes, their solution will be even more tempting. Don't accept their FUD. People in other parts of the world live in much more hostile environments.

    Sorry if this is somewhat of a rant, or possibly sounding a bit too much like FUD, but I'm hearing what's in store for computers and DRM, coupled with what's in store for our rights and privacy (namely the elimination therein), and I'm not liking the world that the next generation will grow up in.

  • So now, people with outstanding felony warrants will no longer saunter down city streets and peruse the shopping malls in broad daylight. What a relief.

    So how long until this wasteful tech spending becomes re-justified by using it instead to harass folks with outstanding parking tickets?
    • Except of course for the fact that facial recognition simply doesn't work. Either it's too sensitive and it picks up everyone and his dog, or it's not sensitive enough and it doesn't even pick up the Elephant Man. Slashdot had an article about this a while back; unfortunately, I don't remember where or when it was.
  • This doesn't surprise me. Back when I was 18 and had long hair, a police man on horseback stopped me for allegedly being drunk when I was totally sober and didn't even have as much as a drink of beer in the last 24 hours or more. I told him I was sober and he said to me (lying) "I saw you stumble a block back."

    Virginia Beach police in general tend to be overzealous; because it's the location of the state police acadamy a lot of their police officers are new to the job. I'm sorry to say that I don't trust the Virginia Beach police to not misuse this monitoring system.

    • one of my friends got a ticket for "reckless bike riding" how fucking ridiculous
    • My brother got a ticket for surfing the wrong beach there, apparently he had strayed slightly over the imaginary line separating surf and no surf zones while riding a wave.
      I remember when Phish decided to play the new Va Beach Ampitheater (summer of 98). The Va Beach cops were out in force, it was unbelievable. I have never seen so many police at a concert! They even had horse police. It was unbelievable how aggressive they were, shoving people around for nothing, yelling, I saw a group of 4 descend on some kid sitting on a cooler, one of them shoved him off so they could look inside to find beer (can't have that in the lots, vendors need the $7 per small plastic cup of bad beer they were selling inside)... totally different to how police treated fans at shows in nearby Hampton (respectfully for the most part).
      Black friends and colleagues of mine have told me that they are mistreated by the police there very frequently. Va Beach doesn't exactly have a shining history of race relations.
      I think one big reason why Va Beach cops are the way they are is because a large proportion of the city's population is deeply, radically reactionary. Pat Robertson's worldwide HQ is there, and apparently a lot of his ill-meaning followers want to live near the leader. All the tales of Beach cop excesses plays well to the home crowd.
      I used to avoid that place like the plague. If you want to see what an ideal America looks like in the minds of hardcore Republicans, go to Virginia Beach.
  • by waldoj ( 8229 ) <waldo@NOSpAM.jaquith.org> on Thursday September 12, 2002 @09:00AM (#4244275) Homepage Journal
    My girlfriend and I went to Virginia Beach on the weekend of July 13th to see Dave Matthews Band [nancies.org], the very weekend that the cameras were scheduled to be turned on. If I had known about the cameras prior to making hotel reservations and acquiring tickets, I probably would have skipped the trip. But having made a financial committment to going, I wasn't about to back out. But I did let them know that I wasn't happy.

    First, I called their tourism bureau (1-800-VA BEACH) in an attempt to determine where the cameras would be, such that I could avoid that area. The woman had no idea, and asked why I wanted to know. I explained -- without getting into lots of details about privacy -- that I was not comfortable having the cameras watching me, despite the fact that I was not, to my knowledge, wanted by any police department. And, as a matter of fact, I was on the verge of cancelling my trip, I told her. The woman was troubled, and directed me to call the police department.

    That went about as well as you could imagine. I talked to a cop there that figured that anybody that didn't want to be on their cameras was obviously a law-breaker. But, hey, he told me the streets that the cameras were on, and I told him that I would certainly not be patronizing businesses along that stretch.

    Did I make a difference? I have no idea. If one person calls, they'll think he's crazy. And if two, two people call...they'll think they're queer. But, friends, can you imagine three -- three people -- walking in, sitting down, and humming a bar of Alice's Restaurant? Friends, we'd have a movement -- the Virginia Beach Massacree. [1]

    -Waldo Jaquith

    [1] "Alice's Restaurant," Arlo Guthrie [arlo.net]
    • I, too, will probably not ever travel to see the Dave Matthews Band live ever again, because of the police checkpoint that was set up at the end of the freeway off-ramp in George, WA near the Gorge. Fifteen to twenty Grant County Sheriff's deputies and state troopers were flagging down every fifth car or so and searching the vehicle. The "probable cause" for the search? The fact that the vehicle took the exit for the Dave Matthews Band concert.

      What has happened to our country? The eroding of our privacy and civil liberties has not just been created by hype, sensationalism, and fear, it's really happening, and frankly it scares the crap out of me. Tell me how to express my displeasure and I will do it.
    • You obviously did not notice the pair of cameras every quarter-mile to mile on the local interstates.

"...a most excellent barbarian ... Genghis Kahn!" -- _Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure_

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