Southeast To Start Video Monitoring Flights 402
NormalVisual writes "According to this article, Southeast Airlines will begin digitally recording everything that goes on during one of their flights. Moreover, they have said they will be retaining the recorded video for up to 10 years. The privacy implications here are worrying, and this sets a bad precedent, IMO." (Southeast is a charter company, not a big scheduled carrier.)
School Buses (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:School Buses (Score:5, Funny)
When I was a kid, we have nuns.
Same things, more lethal.
Re:School Buses (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:School Buses (Score:3, Funny)
Re:School Buses (Score:5, Informative)
Because of this, only the real problem buses got the cameras. The cameras recorded onto a tape that looped every couple of hours, so unless they pulled the tape out of the bus for review it just recorded over itself.
One some buses, there was a switch on the dashboard that would turn the camera on and off. Sometimes it was unlabeled, other times it had some nonsense label like "Landing Light" or "Sign Light" or something like that. Other buses simply ran the camera when the ignition was on. The blinking red light would blink regardless of switch position, camera installed or not.
Sometimes they would tell the driver there was a camera in the bus, sometimes they don't. I think this was to keep the drivers on their toes more than anything else, because the cameras can also record what the driver does. Nevertheless, the driver does not have keys to open the box.
In the last year or two, all the new buses they have purchased come with cameras preinstalled. Unlike the old buses with a one way mirror, these buses you can clearly see the camera behind the glass. The trick though is that under the dashboard there is a box that holds a VCR, and they only have so many of these VCRs to go around. So while each new bus clearly has a camera, not all are recording.
I have seen footage from the new bus cameras and it is quite good too. The old ones weren't so hot. I think the new ones are digital but I'm not sure (haven't asked).
Re:School Buses (Score:2)
No more sex charters? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No more sex charters? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No more sex charters? (Score:5, Funny)
Looks like it was already taken: (WHOIS)
Registrant:
PFM Technologies
6373 NW 110th Ave
Parkland, Florida 33076
United States
Registered through: Go Daddy Software (http://www.godaddy.com)
Domain Name: BANGPLANE.COM
Created on: 23-May-03
Expires on: 23-May-04
Last Updated on: 07-Jun-03
Administrative Contact:
Kline, Jason
jason@pfmtechnologies.com
PFM Technologies
6373 NW 110th Ave
Parkland, Florida 33076
United States
(954) 757-3115
Technical Contact:
Kline, Jason
jason@pfmtechnologies.com
PFM Technologies
6373 NW 110th Ave
Parkland, Florida 33076
United States
(954) 757-3115
Domain servers in listed order: NS1.RANKINC.COM
NS2.RANKINC.COM
What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll be redundant here: You have no right to privacy on someone elses private property, except where excluded by law.
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:2, Insightful)
Just because this may be a step above any existing monitoring, and just because no law prevents it, why can't we be bothered by this? When it comes to issues like this the line is fairly arbitrary, as it is a personal feeling. Just because you are comfortable with this doesn't mean everyone has to be.
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:3, Interesting)
Just because they are providing the service, doesn't mean that they can do anything with your private information.
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:4, Informative)
Just because they are providing the service, doesn't mean that they can do anything with your private information.
There's such a thing as expectation of privacy. You've every right to expect privacy in a shower but you've no right to expect privacy in a shop, restaurant, public highway or plane seat.
Why? Because, unless you're invisible, people can see you in a shop, restaurant, public highway or plane seat. If this is a problem for you I suggest that you do one of the following:
1. never leave the house; or
2. learn how to become invisible.
Good luck with number 2.
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:2)
Not exactly. They still cannot discriminate based on legally protected characteristics. See this comment here [slashdot.org].
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:2)
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:2)
Differences (Score:5, Insightful)
(1) you are in a public place, and other people can see you
(2) you are in a public place, and video archives of everything you do are stored and accessible, now, for 10 years, but almost certainly, for life
Do you not see a difference?
One is called reputation. The other is something that enables Orwellian nightmares.
There is a certain invevitability that is working here, but all that recommends is that the state not be in charge.
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:2)
On top of this think about if the plane crashes. Currently we have nearly worthless flight recorders. Having tape of what happened on the plane would be great. One co
Re:What right to privacy do you think you have (Score:3, Insightful)
Depends who's privacy it is. When it comes to the US Government wanting to keep things secret they appear rather enthusiastic...
As a result, there should be no SSN used by virtually everybody for purposes of identification
Was the SSN ever intended as a purpose of identification. Like many things it appears to have been abused for purposes it was never intended.
Re:Nice MORE trolling (Score:2)
Re:Nice trolling (Score:3, Informative)
If someone sent your wife a drawing of you having sex with another woman, she probably wouldn't divorce you (the baby eating bishop of Bath and Wells aside). If they sent her a photo of the same, however, you might be in a spot of trouble.
Eventually, as CGI improves, photos will probably be losing their power as obje
There's really nothing wrong with this (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:There's really nothing wrong with this (Score:2)
Until every airline has a similar setup and your "choice" is now to fly or drive.
Actually, the airline has nothing to do with it (Score:2)
Ooooops! (Score:2)
Re:There's really nothing wrong with this (Score:2)
Re:There's really nothing wrong with this (Score:3, Insightful)
However when you are on private property the property hold has the right to refuse service, monitor communications, tape whatever they want. When you go into a 7-11 you don't have the right to tell the manager of 7-11 or a franchisee to turn off the video camera because it may or may not infringe on your rights.
Likewise, if someone comes onto someone else's property the property owner or a representative o
Re:There's really nothing wrong with this (Score:2)
Re:There's really nothing wrong with this (Score:2, Informative)
Re:There's really nothing wrong with this (Score:2)
XXXAIRPORN.NET?? (Score:5, Funny)
Well so much for www.livemilehighclub.com
Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:5, Insightful)
Whining about this is almost as bad as the tool that got kicked off [politechbot.com] a British Airways flight for wearing a button that said "Suspected Terrorist." When you board a plane, you no longer follow the Constitution to the letter --- it's not the open public. It's either their way, or the Long Island Expressway.
Learn to play by others' rules or until then, STFU.
That is all.
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because you're on someone elses private property doesn't mean that certain rights go out the window. I'd hate for my landlord to have the legal power to place camera's in her house - the house in which I live.
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
For those of you who want to join in the fun, get your own Suspected Terrorist tshirts and stuff here [cafeshops.com].
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:5, Insightful)
And why would a SUICIDE terrorist care if his picture is taken? It is not like he is planning on flying again. Much of the "security" measures the USA is implementing are like this - completely ineffectual, but make a nervous public feel better.
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not one to agree with his actions; he had to have known that wearing such a pin would cause problems. Then again, I'm fairly sure Rosa Parks had to have known that not giving up her seat would cause problems, too.
Now, before I'm shouted down for drawing that comparison, let me point out that, no, I don't believe the two actions are of the same importance, but Gilmore's message is no less respectable: a cry to bring some measure of sanity to the airline industry.
How much government money has been thrown at existing air carriers of late? They're living in their own world right now, where they use taxpayer money and have common carrier status, yet seem to be exempt from the finer points of Constitutional decree. They just have way too much lattitude to govern peoples' behavior, and they chose to use that lattitude to install a false sense of security for the absolute dumbest fucktard imaginable.
Any rational person would view Gilmore's button as a political statement. Any reasonably intelligent person realizes that he can even more damage with his bare hands than a pair of nail clippers. Even the dumbest of the dumb realize that a 3-inch G.I. Joe doll's gun poses no threat to anyone.
Yet the airlines continue to enforce these absurd policies, and have turned flying into such a frustrating, nerve-wracking experience, that people just want to scream! Enough of this crap!
And if the above plea for sanity doesn't sway you, think of it this way:
The government is pouring tons of taxpayer money into an existing private industry that's a borderline monopoly (well, more an oligopoly), and exists to serve the public, yet is still allowed to behave as an entirely private industry, free from the constraints of Constitutional decree.
Sound like any other industry you know of? Maybe those telecoms we all hate so much, here on Slashdot?
It's the same concept: out tax dollars are being spent on a private, non-competetive industry. So where's our say? Why is our money being given to another industry that's just going to turn around and screw us over?
With the RIAA, it's our money. With the telecoms, it's our money. With the airlines, it's our money and our rights.
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
You are either a troll, or ignorant of law.
Common carrier status, which is applied to airlines, requires that no customer seeking service upon reasonable demand, willing and able to pay the established price, however set, would be denied lawful use of the service or would otherwise be discriminated against.
If British Airways was an American company, they would have broken the law by violating their common carrier status. Just like if telephone companies started to censor your communications.
John Gilmore is nobody's tool (Score:5, Insightful)
John Gilmore [toad.com] has done more for personal freedoms and liberties on the net than anyone you know. He founded or helped found the EFF, the "alt" newsgroups, the Cypherpunks, and Cygnus Support, the first company that showed that you could make money supporting open source software. Cygnus was later bought by Red Hat for umpteen millions of dollars, but Gilmore was already rich, having been one of the first employees at Sun Microsystems.
He has steadily plowed his money back into causes designed to promote freedom online and in the physical world. He has funded the FreeS/Wan [freeswan.org] project designed to provide automatic link-based encryption. He's also funded efforts to add security to the DNS. He provided the money for the machine that proved once and for all that DES was insecure [eff.org]. He is presently suing the government over travel restrictions [cryptome.org].
As for the button incident, his point is that we are all being treated as suspected terrorists under the current regulations. As long as people put up with that without a protest, nothing is going to change. We should all be grateful that someone with Gilmore's credentials and financial strength is doing something about the increasingly harsh restrictions that all of us face as the government cracks down.
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
"I'm suing John Ashcroft, two airlines, and various other agencies over making people show IDs to fly -- an intrusive measure that provides no security."
leads me to believe that this guy's a little bit deranged.
PS: For those who know I don't fly in the US because of the ID demand: I'm willing to show a passport to travel to another country. I'm not
willing to show ID -- an "internal passport" -- to fly within my own country.
This guy's just an asshole, plain and
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
I think it went the same direction as the Open Source Aircraft Carrier [slashdot.org] .
And before you get any ideas: No, I don't think that aircraft carrier is large enough to launch SouthEast Airlines commercial flights.
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
From now on, I only fly on airlines that provide BSD seating.
Re:Airplanes != Public, hence your leave your (Score:2)
Yes. You aren't guaranteed freedom of speech on private property. An aircraft is private property.
No more fingers in the nose (Score:4, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Security on Airlines... (Score:2)
The fact they still sell glass bottles shows how little they actually care.
Re:Security on Airlines... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Security on Airlines... (Score:2)
Re:No one's hijacking a plane in the US for 200 yr (Score:4, Insightful)
who cares? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:who cares? (Score:2)
the cameras and storage equipment, there is no harm to the company
and no great expense associated with keeping the data forever.
You're lucky they decided to limit it to 10 years rather than using
a weasel word like "indefinately".
Another thing to consider is that the crimes that they're hoping to
use this footage to prosecute might have a 10 year limit on how long
they're prosecutable (can't think of the word...you know what I mean).
how long before we see crash footage? (Score:5, Insightful)
We'll see people getting spammed about and cooked as planes auger into the ground or the ocean or buildings.
You know some sick bastards will do this.
I used to work in a TV studio many years ago and there was one camera man that was seriously sick. He kept a personal library of death videos, car wrecks, murder scenes, you name it. I think he probably masturbated to this stuff considering how excited he would get when he got new footage of dead people.
Sad to say it but there really are some sicko's out there...
Re:how long before we see crash footage? (Score:2)
Re:how long before we see crash footage? (Score:2, Interesting)
Their revenues were pretty limited in those days because the papers were only sold at the grubby newsstand downtown next to the bus station, along with the jerkoff books. The business was revolutionized when som
Re: how long before we see crash footage? (Score:2)
However, the pilots' jokes and jabs at each other [gouvernement.lu] are left in, and they can be much scarier than any noises the passengers could make...
What privacy? (Score:5, Insightful)
Christ, talk about a knee-jerk reaction. About the worst this will do is enable a bored technician to watch you pick your nose ten years from now, and the best it will do is help the FBI catch a terrorist (or even an ordinary, everyday criminal).
Why bad? (Score:5, Insightful)
So an airline has said that they will start taping the cabind during flight, to prevent terrorism and other safety threats. Why is this bad? Is this any different from a drugstore or a bank having a surveilence camera running? No, it isn't. Do we complain about those? Not that I've heard.
I know, some of you may say that beeing taped while you're on board a plane is a breach of your right to privacy - but since when is a chartered plane your private area anyway? It's a public area, and when you're in public, you can be seen by others.
That said, I'm not too happy about them storing the video for ten years - two years should be the most, and unless something spectacular happened on the flight (like Elvis materialising and singing 'love me tender'), it should only be released to the proper authorities by the orders of a court. The one exeption to that rule would be if the carrier themself needed to use the video if it had to sue a passenger for air-rage (endangering the safety of the other passangers).
No, installing a few cameras in an airplane wont - as the article points out - prevernt terrists from attemting to take over the plane. But it might just be enought to stop that fatass next to you from getting hideously drunk and suffer from air-rage. And that can't be a bad thing, can it?
Re:Why bad? (Score:2)
Am I missing something? I thought a chartered plane means the customer hires a plane and pilot to fly somewhere. How is this different than, say renting an apartment? Should your landlord be allowed to put video cameras in your apartment? After all, maybe you are assembling bombs in there. You might even be having sex in it. Eeewww. Disgusting. Landlords should track the sexual habits of all their residents (even the married ones), then make the
they're going to far (Score:2, Informative)
but I see no reason to keep the tapes, especially for 10 years. (plus increased fares for storing all these files?)
also, recording private conversations with no prior good reason and without consent is not acceptable imo.
here in the UK, the data protection act means (IANAL) that you must be provided with a copy of all footage of yourself if requested.
Re:they're going to far (Score:2)
There was a series on UK TV a couple of years back - "The Mark Thomas Product", where the presenter urged members of the public to go into banks, garages and department stores, and dance about in front of a camera, so they could then demand any footage of themselves under the terms of the data-protection act. I thought that was a genius idea - imagine if a few thousand people
Transparent Society (Score:5, Interesting)
I find it quite amazing that this work in 1996 highlighted so many issues now coming to bear - such as this one - and the article is clearly written.
Here's the first thing I'd change - All audio and video collected by any police organization should be public record 14 days after it was first recorded.
Access to the video in realtime as suggested by the above article (You did READ it, didn't you?) can be used to tactical advantage by criminal organizations - but the 14 day delay would have the same effect of keeping the cops honest without surrendering any meaningful tactical information.
Then, we could expand out from there.
Why waste weight for this useless flight data? (Score:5, Insightful)
In Europe, every carier records hundreds of parameters of the flight. After even a minor problem on the flight, the data tape is pulled and analyzed by maintenance. The result is they don't have stupid maintenance accidents like Alaska Airlines did. Stuck rudder? It's analyzed and fixed within weeks, not left unchecked for months.
The only reason they are recording their passengers is to protect them from liability when they handcuff an unruly passenger. It has little to do with increasing your safety.
Employee Monitoring? (Score:2, Insightful)
blacking 'em out (Score:3, Insightful)
Ok, so what's to stop you from slipping a little piece of airplane-trim-colored tape over the lens staring you back in the face? Or a little vaseline to blur things a tad? Or, if you're feeling really nasty, some nail polish, clear or otherwise(it'll permanently bond to the plastic lens.)
Re:blacking 'em out (Score:2)
A: The sure-to-follow Federal law against tampering with an aircraft security device. It's just a matter of time.
I'm predicting that within twenty years it will be a Felony to wear any face covering in public that might conceal your identy from Big Brother's Telescreen Network.
In my car (Score:2)
Personally, I think it's a good idea. They should record what is happening in the cockpit, and the passenger compartment. Though I'm not sure what they're trying to see
Surveillance Cameras or just Advanced FDRs (Score:3, Insightful)
If they indeed are planning to install cameras, I would like to see them choose the first alternative...beam all videos live to monitoring stations, to constantly monitor the passengers, warn the crew of dangerous activity and take preventive action.
FDRs are basically doomsday equipment, useful only after an incident has occurred, it would make more sense to work towards preventing incidents, rather than plan towards subsequent investigations and lawsuits.
Ofcourse, the costs involved in setting up live broadcasting of video, and the infrastructure to monitor the large number of simultaneous flights/cameras would prove prohibitive.
Doh! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Doh! (Score:2)
Honey Roasted Nuts (Score:4, Funny)
What folks seem to be missing here... (Score:3, Interesting)
And were the airline merely recording the flight, holding the recording a couple of days or so, then scrubbing it, I personally would not have a problem with it - there are many cases of air rage, gross stupidity, and so on that could best be handled with a tape ("You claim the flight attendants were needlessly violent in denying you your drink? Well, let's roll tape... Hmmm, seems you took a swing at them first. CASE DISMISSED!")
But while it is one thing to hold the video for a couple of days, to allow for any complaints or issues a chance to come out, it is quite another to hold the video for TEN YEARS! What possible logic would require a video to be held for ten years in the absence of a complaint?
What, do they expect some flight attendant to remember, after 8 years, "Oh yeah, that Mr. Tuttle in 3A pinched me, made lewd comments, and tried to steal the headphones - let's go get the tape and bust him!"?
Re:What folks seem to be missing here... (Score:2)
Re:What folks seem to be missing here... (Score:3, Interesting)
A California restaurant was sued at the last possible moment (AFAIK - 5 years after the incident allegedly happened) for some supposed discrimination against the disabled. After that lengt
Think of the possibilities!!! (Score:2)
Apple Vacations (Score:2, Informative)
www.applevacations.com
anything wrong with this? (Score:2)
I would like to offer my opinion regarding the comments basically saying "there is nothing wrong with this, since the planes are their property they can do whatever they want".
First of all, I agree there is nothing illegal about this, but it is not the same thing as "there is nothing wrong". There is more to human interaction than what is defined by laws. Second, planes might be private property but the airlines cannot do whatever they choose. They are using my airspace, polluting my air, irritating my ear
Scientology connection (Score:2)
Taxies and Gillmore (Score:2)
Dan Gillmore [siliconvalley.com] isn't so crazy about this Southeast "innovation".
but what good is this? (Score:2, Interesting)
if they're terrorists they're probally going to kill themselves anyways.
sure it might help get id on those people, but does it really HELP?
seems a little pointless...
Chicago Transit Authority (Score:2)
Mile-High club membership... (Score:3, Funny)
It's NOT SouthWest airlines. (Score:5, Informative)
I just thought I'd point this out, before people start changing their travel plans.
This Bogus For Many Reasons (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Since they don't videotape the johns, anybody can can do anything in there - including nookie between the pilots/stewardesses/passengers (make up your own combination!), terrorists preparing weapons, criminals smoking dope, etc. So there's no advantage.
2) As someone pointed out, keeping it for ten years is braindead. It's extremely unlikely that any liability or security concerns - or even marketing concerns - could justify that time span.
3) As for processing the video, keep in mind that this stuff is probably going to be digitized and stored where pattern recognization software might be able to process it - if not now, then ten years from now. This means a vast store of videos for Homeland Security to look at and analyze - at taxpayer expense - to no good ends. Or for the airlines - and whoever else they sell the data to - to use for marketing purposes.
4) They ADMIT that the purpose is to enable law enforcement to keep track of criminals! THIS MEANS YOU! This means the tapes WILL BE PROVIDED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT ROUTINELY! Read the fraggim' article!
5) As someone in the article points out, what's the point of keeping tapes of flights where nothing happens? It is obvious that there are ulterior motives here.
6) As for why THEY are doing it, the article says Homeland Security WILL eventually mandate it, so they are starting now. This means the ball comes from Homeland Security's court, but the airline sees a marketing advantage from analyzing all those videos for marketing purposes. This also means that once Homeland Security has mandated it, the notion "if you don't like it, don't fly with this specific airline" is not a viable option for business travelers who MUST fly on business.
While it is obviously true that you have no privacy in public places and should not particularly expect any, there is a difference betweem being inspected by your fellow asshole citizen and being inspected by some marketing asshole or some security asshole you don't know and who may have an agenda and the authority to put your ass in jail based on misinterpretation of some grainy vidcap.
One hopes all the stupid, right-wing, patriotic American dolts on
Morons...
Re:This Bogus For Many Reasons (Score:3, Informative)
I wonder if it would be possible... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't like it? Don't fly it.
Re:1984 (Score:4, Insightful)
If TWA or WestJet started doing this, that would be something new. If I'm completely wrong here, I'd really like to know *how* I'm being surveyed on every flight I take.
Anyway, if they want their business to go down, that's their problem. Next they'll institute a policy where you spray passengers with skunk stink and expect their business to remain profitable.
Re:1984 (Score:3, Funny)
Not indefinitly but long enough. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Next up: (Score:2)
Re:Next up: (Score:2)