An Imaginative Use For CCTVs 191
An anonymous reader writes "Everyone knows we're being watched by CCTVs everywhere — particularly in the UK — and virtually everyone (at least on Slashdot) complains about that fact. But have you ever stopped to consider the ways you can use all those CCTVs to your advantage? The Get Out Clause, an unsigned band from Manchester in the UK, did just that; they played in front of 80 different CCTVs around Manchester, and then asked for the video via Freedom of Information Act letters. (About 25% of the CCTV owners complied with the law and turned them over.) The result isn't too bad."
"Stars of CCTV" (Score:5, Informative)
And every move that I make
Gets recorded to tape
So somebody up there
Can keep me safe
We're the stars of CCTV
Making movies out on the street
Flashing blue lights, camera, action
Watching my life, main attraction
We're the stars of CCTV
Can't you see the camera loves me?
Levellers beat both of these to the punch (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Correct version (Score:5, Funny)
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Of course, if you get waxed by armed police, it's called a Brazilian [bbc.co.uk].
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There are traffic congestion and speed cameras in the UK, but AFAIK none are used to check for style of driving.
Wait, CCTV owners? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Wait, CCTV owners? (Score:5, Informative)
The ones outside the stores are their own. The one's inside places like stadiums, Malls are owned by the people who run these places.
No-one is watching (Score:5, Insightful)
The only change is that the feral brats who congregate in town centres now wear a sporting baseball cap and hooded top combination to escape identification on camera. Teenagers nowadays have never known life without CCTV anyway so it's not really any sort of deterrent to them commiting crimes. The camera on the street corner is pretty much a totemic reminder of their impunity and the impotency of the police.
I know friends and relatives over the years who where assaulted and have asked police to survey CCTV in order to catch the offenders. Usually there's some lame excuse about the camera not being on, pointing the wrong way, a technical fault or some equally daft reason. I suspect the police don't have the man power to go back over it or most likely they just plain can't be bothered. Just last year, this happened to my brother when he was attacked by a gang of thugs in Edinburgh.
Try not to worry too much about your rights being slowly eroded way by CCTV. It's security theatre on a massive scale and no-one's watching anyway...
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Re:No-one is watching (Score:4, Insightful)
The post wasn't about whether or not CCTV is heavily eroding your rights (which is debatable and not as cut and dried as you seem to suggest) but rather about the fact that it doesn't do anything except waste a lot of money. All that crap you see on TV about the cops tracking someone from camera to camera only happens in mass crimes like bombings. For every day crimes, like rape and mugging etc, the cops don't have the manpower or the desire to put forth that kind of effort. Even if they did, it wouldn't be in any reasonable time frame (it would take weeks at a minimum, not days) and it still wouldn't "revoke" the actual crime. Therefore, your public safety has not been enhanced in the slightest, which was the whole point of the GP's post.
Re:No-one is watching (Score:4, Insightful)
We're not living in some magical world with infinite funds. In order to install a massive CCTV system, money has to be taken from some other place -- that other place might be more effective at reducing crime. Or keeping the criminals from an early release. Or some other such thing.
But if it's not as newbite-worthy, if it doesn't sound as tech-savvy, well then the CCTV wins!
The whole "IF IT SAVES JUST ONE..." argument is a worthless and ridiculous appeal to emotion.
Re:Wait, CCTV owners? (Score:5, Informative)
Almost all of the CCTV cameras that are frequently cited as being part of a "surveillance state" in the UK are owned and operated by private individuals, not the government. Specifically, most are run by shops. The article refers to the band using one on a bus.
Which raises the question -- why did the band expect the freedom of information act to apply to these? It only applies to government-run organisations, so the owners of the cameras in question had no obligation to comply with the request.
Re:Wait, CCTV owners? (Score:5, Informative)
Dom Joly did a similar thing in his last series, IIRC.
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Re:Wait, CCTV owners? (Score:5, Interesting)
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And Mark Thomas is far cooler than that fat Lebanese git who went to school with Osama bin Laden...
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Which raises the question -- why did the band expect the freedom of information act to apply to these? It only applies to government-run organisations, so the owners of the cameras in question had no obligation to comply with the request.
Indeed, I suspect the article may be wrong. It's the Data Protection Act (DPA) that restricts the information which companies can hold about individuals, and limits the way that information can be processed and used.
It is a provision of the DPA that an individual can request that a company discloses all of the information that it holds on that individual. This can include information stored on video tape, such as that gathered by a company's CCTV cameras.
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The DPA does not apply to CCTV. CCTV information is simply in a recording in chronological order - it has no filing system based on an individual.
It's not as simple as that. Whether something is personal data often depends on the context. For example, quoting the ICO web site you linked to yourself [ico.gov.uk]:
"Where an individual is not previously known to the operators of a sophisticated multi-camera town centre CCTV system, but the operators are able to distinguish that individual on the basis of physical characteristics, that individual is identified. Therefore, where the operators are tracking a particular individual that they have singled out in some way (perhaps using such physical characteristics) they will be processing 'personal data'."
DPA not FoI (Score:5, Informative)
It could get expensive though as they're allowed to charge a processing fee which by the way I think absolutely stinks. Why should you have to pay to see if they've fucked up your data? The burden should be entirely on the data holders and if they get lots of malicious requests designed to cost them money in man hours then maybe they should reconsider the need to store data on you in the first place. At very worst the costs should be capped at something trivial like £0.50.
In the end, everybody pays (Score:2)
Do you think they should raise their prices instead? So that any wannabe rock band can get a free recording paid by the other customers?
History teaches us that anything that's not charged directly to the interested parties will escalate into a "Tragedy of Commons" [wikipedia.org] situation.
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Re:Data Protection? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Data Protection? (Score:5, Insightful)
I get the feeling that the latter is normally the main goal here, but the former is required for that to be tenable.
Specifically in the UK, according to Wikipedia's entry on the Data Protection Act [wikipedia.org]:
The person who has their data processed has the right to
So they may have tried to use the 'subject access' thing. Wikipedia also mentions that costs cannot exceed £10.
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Re:Wait, CCTV owners? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Wait, CCTV owners? (Score:4, Informative)
Kudos to these guys for pulling this off though. How they managed to set up a drum kit on one of the Metrolink trams and on the travelator in Sainsbury's supermarket in Fallowfield (which is at a 45 degree angle!) is crazy.
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Re:Wait, CCTV owners? (Score:4, Insightful)
Just because you're not convicted, doesn't mean the law isn't abused.
My Sweet Lord (Score:2)
There's lots of private CCTV (Score:2)
There's lots of private CCTV out there. Heck you can even get some of your own. If you want to mo
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This is one of the things that is so scary about CCTV here - most of it is in the hands of private induhviduals, far away from any proper oversight, but combined with the fact that the authorities can get at it at any time.
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Als
Music Video (Score:5, Informative)
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Is it just me... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:5, Informative)
My suspicion is that the band doesn't actually understand the FIA. From the article:
They set up their equipment, drum kit and all, in eighty locations around Manchester - including on a bus - and proceeded to play to the cameras.
Afterwards they wrote to the companies or organisations involved and asked for the footage under the Freedom of Information Act.
[...]
Only a quarter of the organisations contacted fulfilled their obligation to hand over the footage - perhaps predictably, bigger firms were reluctant, while smaller companies were more helpful - but that still provided enough for a video with 20 locations.
The bus and "bigger firms" are referring to cameras operated by private organisations which have no legal obligation to respond to such a request. "Smaller companies" were presumably more helpful due to the fact that they didn't have lawyers to inform them of this fact.
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It would be interesting to know, though, if any of the refusals came from any such organisations...
Re:Is it just me... (Score:4, Informative)
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Yes, although the DPA allows organisations to make a charge of £20 for providing the requested information. With "80 locations" that would have come in at £1600, probably more than the band wanted to spend on this project.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:4, Informative)
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The FoI act also allows a fee [opsi.gov.uk]. I'm not sure what the limit is, but I think charges of around £70 are normal. The DPA might actually be more cost-effective.
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Perhaps you should improve the technology so actually retrieving information from the system more efficient? It seems to me that this is exactly the same type of operation the owner of the CCTV systems will need to do to track down theft, so that seems like a good idea in any case.
Unless the point is to just scare people with cameras, which means you can simply turn them off and tell the people invoking the DPA that there is no vide
Re:Is it just me... (Score:5, Insightful)
Smaller companies' cameras are more likely to be outsourced to security firms, who, since it is their primary business, would be well versed in their obligations relating to cameras covering public spaces, and are generally quite lenient in making the video available. It is probably chargeable back to the client, so an additional revenue source for them, and not worth refusing over a technicality like the wrong Act being used to request the images.
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Public bodies (Score:2)
Heads up (Score:3, Informative)
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Mark Thomas (Score:5, Interesting)
In 2000 (I think) he orchestrated a national "talent show" kind of competition where all entries had to be submitted as CCTV footage recovered from CCTV operators through measures under the Data Protection Act. Hilarious stuff
Alli
Re:Mark Thomas (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong, I applaud this band as well as the comedian. So many good ideas, get wasted due to indolence. I am glad someone didn't waste this one.
Many people may have thought 'whats the big deal, I thought of doing that as well, it's no stroke of genius.'
I ask 'But did you do it?'
Kudos and applause to these guys, not only for the idea but for the balls and willingness to do it.
So if you got an idea, don't waste it. Do it, or at least tell someone who will do it. Don't let ideas die.
No I am not promoting some self-help book.
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Hmm, this sound familiar. [penny-arcade.com]
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And in a more whimsical vein... (Score:3, Funny)
I see flash mobs. Many, many flash mobs, all obsessed with CCTV cameras. All overcome by a powerful need to bend over and drop trou.
You just KNOW somebody would leak the video before long.
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Blue Moon?
Under the Moon of Love?
Paper Moon?
The list goes on...
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Only 25%? (Score:2)
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Because the refusals probably weren't illegal. See my comment here [slashdot.org].
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75% failure (Score:2)
Erm, 75% failure to commit to a act specified by a law is pretty damn bad if you ask me.
Also the BBC did something along these lines where they asked for the videos, I think they got like 50% back, some claimed there was no record (i.e. they weren't actually recording) and others stated various security clauses.
Oh, and no I haven't read any other replies, I maybe redundant -_-
Best part of the clip (Score:2)
Use DPA not FOI (Score:2)
Making a request under the Data Protection Act would have been the correct thing to do. Since the 'data' on the tape is about you, so they have to respond u
The story is about a month old (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The story is about a month old (Score:5, Informative)
Exactly, I was about to suggest that it was fake.
I work as a part-time CCTV operator (while I'm at University), and the footage just doesn't look remotely real to me. Specifically the frame-rate is FAR too high, most CCTV systems have the frame-rate turned down quite low (say 3-5 FPS) to save space.
Second, not every CCTV camera is necessarily recording at the same time. While every camera probably CAN record, usually only key cameras will be set to record, maybe half or less, to save space on the system. The idea is that if anything happens the CCTV operator will record that camera, not that everything records all the time.
If a band asked me to look up their footage because of something like this, the footage they'd get back wouldn't look that good. This is a publicity stunt.
(and, as has already been pointed out, the Data Protection Act, not the Freedom of Information Act)
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http://24.163.160.192/view/index.shtml [24.163.160.192]
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I've always half suspected the blurry black and white images were postprocessed to look like that, just to make people feel better about CCTV - I've met a lot of people who think they stil
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The idea is that if anything happens the CCTV operator will record that camera, not that everything records all the time.
"Anything happens", like when four lads suddenly walk up with a drum kit and guitars and start singing at your camera?
As for "not real", you can tell which cuts they filmed themselves because they don't have text on them (aside from the band's watermark in the lower-right corner), and usually they have colour too. Also, a raster effect was added to the handheld shots. The taxi shot, the close-ups, and much of the escalator sequence are clearly done with a handheld camera.
I think it's too bad that they h
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I'm not persuaded they used *any* real CCTV at this point.
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Stratospheric (Score:3, Informative)
On MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/londonkiosk [myspace.com]
On YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5BBCMYO2PHQ [youtube.com]
Free MP3 download: http://www.contactmusic.com/new/home.nsf/webpages/kioskx25x09x03 [contactmusic.com]
No connection to the band. In fact I think the music sucks... Still, they simply don't have as good of a PR guy working for them.
Video was a P.R. stunt.. (Score:4, Informative)
Regardless, it was a pretty good one all the same!
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"When there are thousands of bands out there trying to get noticed this has made people sit up and listen. They've appeared on Sky and whether their music is good or not people will hear it. It's got people talking about them which is what I guess they meant to do."
So they lied in a pathetic bid to make money, and that's acceptable somehow?
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I'm Unworthy (Score:2)
Moral of the story? (Score:2)
CCTV uses (Score:2)
Coming up next... (Score:2, Interesting)
During the video, an amateur theater company did also get imaginative about the use for CCTVs.
Related story: London 2006, Meet London 1984 [slashdot.org].
And the rest? (Score:2)
Creative use of red light cameras (Score:2)
This reminded me of the part in National Treasure: Book of Secrets where our favorite treasure hunter needs a photograph of an artifact but no one has a camera, so he speeds through a red light while holding an artifact up to the windshield in order to get a photo of it. Of course he then has his geek sidekick crack into the police computers and retrieve the picture.
I wonder how hard it real it really would be to intercept red light camera images? Where I live, the cameras at an intersection all seem t
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The latest ones I believe are fully digital but not wireless - they're hardwired to the control centre to an automatic system that issues tickets at the moment the offence happens.. so you'll have the photos posted to you the next day normally (along with a hefty fine and a license endo
CCTV, one day on camera (Score:2)
Enjoy.
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This just looks like the spreading of a rumor that it was professional footage as fact.
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Re:Really good (Score:4, Insightful)
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I highly doubt their claims it was all cctv footage and the crybaby excuse they lack the proper equipment. the audio synching done on that was done by a seasoned pro on final cut or avid.
Also when they got the "footage" they would have had at least 60 different formats, many requiring a special playback software app. and anything in analog on t
Re:Really good (Score:5, Interesting)
http://observers.france24.com/en/content/20080516-hoax-cctv-video-get-out-clause-clip [france24.com]
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Re:nothing to "comply with" (Score:4, Informative)
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I vaguely remember a US case of an adult who was ticked off that kids were "parking" (and getting naked) near his driveway on the weekends. He took photos to the police to complain, and they charged him with kiddie-porn charges.