Traffic Cameras Used for Pedestrian Monitoring 50
Quixote writes "A couple of days ago, there were
news
reports
about
a traffic camera near
Univ. of Alabama
being actually used to checkout passersby by someone at the state troopers' office. Today, there's a
news report
about 3 people being arrested for 'public misconduct' by the same camera (including one man for grabbing his crotch (don't ballplayers routinely do this? ;)). This story highlights an issue which most privacy advocates worry about: the extension of a surveillance technology to cover areas it was not intended to cover. This camera is a traffic camera: it was installed for monitoring the traffic conditions on the road. Now it is being used to monitor people (albeit the 'monitoring' was for some <ahem> other purposes in the beginning). I will submit that in a public place you have no right to privacy; but this yet another example of something to keep in mind when considering other 'privacy eroding' technologies."
Only the guilty have anything to fear (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Only the guilty have anything to fear (Score:2)
(I'm still not sure I understand what exactly is wrong with grabbing your crotch in public. I mean, if you're specifically trying to sexually harrass someone, that's one thing, but besides that, why should anyone care?)
Re:Only the guilty have anything to fear (Score:2)
Eight-by-ten color glossy photographs with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each one, explainin' what each one was to be used as evidence
Pictures of the approach, the getaway, the northwest corner, the southwest corner, and that's not to mention the aerial photography
-
Context (Score:3, Insightful)
It is criminal to grab your crotch (Score:1, Funny)
Grab someone elses.
Time to fight back... (Score:3, Funny)
Anyone near the camera should go there and do something unusual but not illegal. (Drink from an imaginary bottle; blow soap bubbles and then snap at them like a dog; pointedly hide your forehead; open an umbrella for no reason; etc., etc.)
-- MarkusQ
Re:Time to fight back... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Time to fight back... (Score:2)
Especially if you have people come up and take snapshots of you taping it.
-- MarkusQ
Re:Time to fight back... (Score:2)
And I can't believe that I'll be the first one to remark that if state troopers are watching university students from a surveillance camera, most of the crotch grabbing has got to be on the watchers' side of the lens.
I will approve of ubiquitous surveillance cameras only when there is universal access to watching them.
Re:Time to fight back... (Score:3, Informative)
That's how this was discovered. They are braodcasted on a cable channel here in town, and you can watch them online here [tuscaloosa.al.us]
Confusion to our morons. (Score:1)
Re:Time to fight back... (Score:1)
Filming for a new video? (Score:1, Interesting)
"A traffic camera focused on an intersection near the University of Alabama showed a lot more than cars recently -- someone used it to zoom in on young women in an unexpected show that was broadcast on cable TV"
Perhaps this was done to grab some new footage for "Girls Gone Wild 5 - Traffic Teases"
BTW, anyone have a Divx of the cable TV footage?
talk about Orwellian (Score:2)
So now we are not only using traffic cameras to monitor people, but we are also using them to enforce accepted behavior?
<sarcasm>
Well, I for one am thankful that are great system is preventing people from grabbing their crotches...
</sarcasm>
As they say, un-fucking-believable...
Re:talk about Orwellian (Score:2)
Daniel
reciprocity? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:reciprocity? (Score:2)
Re:reciprocity? (Score:2)
But they're nowhere near as bad as Seattle's (well KC Metro anyways) bus drivers - running red lights, blocking intersections, etc.
before you get too upset (Score:3, Funny)
Re:before you get too upset (Score:3, Funny)
This has to violate some kind of FCC rule!
What's Indecent Here? (Score:5, Interesting)
Right to Privacy in a Public Place (Score:1, Insightful)
That ancient viewpoint, approprite in a world without technology which enhances human senses, needs to change. The public spaces of the world have themselves been altered when new technologies provide the capability for incredible scrutiny, looking under people's clothing, doing camera closeups, facial recognition, whatever, etc. What used to be a *public* place with humans all (with the exception of blind people, deaf people, etc
So? (Score:1)
The way I see it, if you're stupid enough to something illegal in broad daylight on a public street, you deserve to get caught and go to jail.
Re:So? (Score:1)
"Meanwhile, officials said they were still investigating who had diverted the focus of the camera from traffic -- where it normally is used to monitor vehicles -- to pedestrians, particularly young women.
The remote-control camera, located at an intersection near a row of nightclubs, usually shows traffic. But officials said someone in a state trooper office diverted the camera to focus on pedestrians in the pre-dawn hours last Friday.
Footage broadcast citywide on a cable TV channel
Re:So? (Score:1)
Link to cameras online here (Score:2)
Turn Tables (Score:2)
Transparency ought to cut both ways.
If technology for video surveillance is becoming so inexpensive and easy to deploy, it makes sense for private citizens to record their authorities, make the information public and hold them accountable so that the public can expect as high standards of behavior from the authorities as the authorites expect of the public.
Re:Turn Tables (Score:3, Insightful)
Fixed Link (Score:1)
Improper camera setup (Score:3, Interesting)
1) The cameras aren't moveable (AFAIK).
2) The cameras can only take snapshots, not video.
3) The cameras only take snapshots when they detect a red light, and a car crossing into the intersection.
I'm not trying to advocate traffic cameras, but at least someone spent some time designing these appropriately.
Re:Improper camera setup (Score:2)
Improper camera operation (Score:2)
And then they send the whole system straight to hell by implementing it improperly. The pictures are processed not by Baltimore police but instead by private contractors, who are paid on commission basis, giving them huge incentive to ignore mitigating factors. Stop one inch over the line? Ticket for you!
Worst of all, Baltimore abuses the system as a profit center by systematically shortening the yellow light times at photo-monitored intersec
Mixed feelings (Score:3, Insightful)
I kinda agree that "it's in the public domain so act accordingly". I definitely think we need to discuss this more. Am I off my rocker here?
Re:Mixed feelings (Score:2)
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin
"and will lose both" is commonly added afterwards.
The only reason to even have certain behavior classified as criminal is to prevent behavior that is detrimental to society. When the method of prevention is more detrimental than the behavior is, what's the point?
Give them a tool and they will use it. (Score:2)
When such cameras first appeared some people predicted that this kind of thing would happen. In response Police and "spy on the public" types said no they would never do such a thing and even gave us their word on the matter. The same was true for the PATRIOT act. When people are given such a tool, even if they do not use it today, someone will come along and use it tomorrow.
Anyone who believes otherwi
Is this the whole story? (Score:2)
"including one man for grabbing his crotch"
Since when was grabbing one's own crotch an arrestable offense? Repeatedly grabbing someone else's, perhaps, but it really is a person's right to grab their own as much as they please.
Being tactless isn't a crime, you know. Well, in the USA, who knows.
We should install more cameras, but this time in front of every donut shop in town...and in the police department break room.
Cop should be held accountable (Score:1, Interesting)
The "watchers" abused the technology, as Human watchers are guaranteed to do, but was caught abusing it by other people "watching" the "watchers". That's how public surveillance should work.
Too bad no one thought to provide official sanctions for when they were caught. Nothing bad will happen to the pervert watching the camera, and they won't even release his name.
This is much worse than anonymous cops spying on people and wondering if they'll be caught if they do something inappropriate. Now it is obv
Gee. (Score:1)