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Prisons Moving To All-Video Visitation (mic.com) 277

"A new system called 'video visitation' is replacing in-person jail visits with glitchy, expensive Skype-like video calls," reports Tech.Mic. "It's inhumane, dystopian and actually increases in-prison violence -- but god, it makes money."

Slashdot reader gurps_npc writes: In-person costs a lot to administer, while you can charge people to 'visit' via video conferencing. (Charge as in overcharge -- just like they charge up to $14 a minute for normal, audio only telephone calls). This is new, and the few studies that have been done show that doing this increases violence in the prison -- and it's believed to also increase recidivism. But the companies making a ton on it like that -- repeat customers and all. Of course, the service is horrible, often being full of static and dropped calls -- and the company doesn't help you fix the problem.
Meanwhile, the EFF reports that last year Facebook disabled 53 U.S prisoner and 74 U.K. prisoner accounts at the request of the government, and is urging people to report takedown requests for inmate social media to OnlineCensorship.org.
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Prisons Moving To All-Video Visitation

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  • No surprise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 08, 2016 @11:32AM (#52070917)

    US prisons are a systematic violation of basic human rights. They are barbaric, full of horrific atrocities, and there is no excuse for them.

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      US prisons are a systematic violation of basic human rights. They are barbaric, full of horrific atrocities, and there is no excuse for them.

      You also need to add in the stats that while the US has 4.4% of the worlds population it has 22% of the worlds prisoners [wikipedia.org]

      Sure you can say that people shouldn't commit crimes. That's easy to say. The hard question to ask is why people are committing crimes at rate much higher than the rest of the world.

      • We can also reach that stat by having longer sentences than other countries. A related issue, if it exists. Are there stats on the how many prisoners we are adding compared to other countries?

    • Re:No surprise (Score:4, Informative)

      by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday May 08, 2016 @01:24PM (#52071449)

      Well, the US is at hart a fundamentalist religious nation. These like to condemn and torture anybody that missteps forever, no mercy to be had. (What, say, the core of the Christian faith says about people that do this to others is not pretty.) Hence adding the maximum level of exploitation on top is no surprise. Kind of reminds me of what was going on in Nazi Concentration Camps and USSR Gulags, or today in similar installations in North Korea. The next step will be involuntary medical experiments. Josef Mengele would be so proud.

    • "US prisons are a systematic violation of basic human rights. They are barbaric, full of horrific atrocities,"

      That's because of the low quality of people we have in them.

  • Humane visitation (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Sunday May 08, 2016 @11:55AM (#52071009) Journal
    Let's keep it in perspective, shall we? Many of the folks behind bars in the US are young, nonviolent offenders who stand a reasonable chance of rehabilitation.

    Contact visits with family and loved ones are a privilege, and give the inmates something to look forward to and stay out of trouble for.

    If prisoners wind up with daily lives so poor nothing that can be taken away from them, who's going to want to take care of them?

    • by beh ( 4759 ) *

      OK, let's keep it in perspective - a shop owner treats customers well to generate repeat business.

      So, why the expectation that privatized prisons won't do everything they can to generate repeat business? Charging for video "visits" makes money - and if on top of that, it has the side effect of increasing recidivism - who ends up making a profit on it?

  • Why would anybody pay to use this service when they can just pay to use/borrow someones cell and Skype? Even better, use a video chat service that works.

  • We've gotta put some real controls on the power of $ in our government. Please add your name to this effort for a start: http://www.movetoamend.org/ [movetoamend.org]

  • I was told , and it stands to reason, that the cost of the call , however horrendous we see it, is because all call have to be listened to/looked over, and the additional cost is simply passed over the prisoner.
    • to put a guard in the room with the two? I know we can't do that with a conjugal visit but I'm guessing we're not doing those over the net unless the prisons have invested in teledildonics.
    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      We have a /. user who works in the industry and has for some time. I imagine they will see this thread but they're on my friend's list so I will put this here and they may notice and respond about the financial aspect. If I get a minute, I'll send them a notice off-site and they may opt to share what they know. (They're helping me out with a project that I am working on.)

  • I'm not going to generalize about Americans, but I will about the voting public. And the ones who vote make the decisions. Fear of scary gang bangers (read: black people) gets folks to the polls. Fear _always_ gets people to the polls. Concern for human decency otoh does not. To fix this we'd need to make prisons public again. So long as there's a profit motive prisons will be horrifying places (they're not gonna be sunshine and rainbows w/o profit, but it'll help).

    The point my rambling is trying to make
  • by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Sunday May 08, 2016 @12:36PM (#52071201)

    Our prison system seems to be turning increasingly evil - as in, willfully and casually harming others on a consistent basis well beyond their charter of stopping harm to others, for their own benefit.

    They're increasingly subverting our political process, in order to take what should arguably be a time of reformation and a path back to society (and improvement of the general welfare), and using is to transform every human into a maximum income machine, including transforming laws to make the process worse. There's occasional noises towards public good in the letter of the rules of these places, but they're getting increasingly privatized and 'efficient' at gathering money.

    I understand the ideal - this is where we throw folks who won't follow the rules, who won't respond to fines, a place where we repay unfairness with unfairness, so that we can remain productive. Which would be a fine ideal too, if it didn't cost taxpayers $60,000-$130,000 a year per person for land,buildings, employees,healthcare, goods, administration, etc.. We're basically paying for a rather large professional army, complete with all the logistics, in order to make a large portion of our population feel bad for the rest of their lives, for the most part.

    It's part of why I've never understood the common Christian conception of Hell - a place of eternal pain, complete with the equivalent of angels who spend their existences making people feel bad for something they can no longer do anything about.

    If the point of this horrible song and dance was to reduce motivation to break rules - then there should be a television in every public space, if not in every home, to show the suffering of rule breakers, to at least justify the lesson that we should be learning from all this suffering. If all these people were paying the cost, for our benefit, then all our children should see their suffering, so all this suffering wouldn't be a waste of both their lives and the time of all the people spending their lives imprisoning them.

    Perhaps we don't because we really are all rule breakers. Most traffic studies I've seen find that the average driver breaks around 4,000 traffic laws every year. Proportionally the same with bike riders and pedestrians. And that's just the easily observable stuff. But we don't really enforce our rules, instead we pay people to selectively enforce them, and prosecute infractions in some of the oddest ways possible. Things like 'discovery processes', armies of paid lawyers, laws changing at the request of lobbyists, special courts, judges owning stakes in other parts of the process, and very strange politics and biases everywhere.

    If the point of the whole game is to pay the least amount of resources, in order to keep the maximum number of people cooperative and productive, then I think everyone would judge that we're doing this the wrong way. There's a LOT of nations to compare against, and we're having worse results than almost all of them.

    The prisons we have now are doing horrible jobs in all regards, and are actively engaged in a process of making things worse. If we're spending all these resources, the cheapest thing to do is to take this large army, and reconcile it with better, more productive, and cheaper goals. It's never going to be cheap or easy, but almost anything is going to be cheaper and easier than the road we're going down now.

    Ryan Fenton

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Perhaps we don't because we really are all rule breakers.

      Or at least anybody with any worth to society is. If you follow all the rules, you will not be doing anything else with your life, never even take the risk to think something not approved. A society that limits all rule-breaking too strictly stagnates pretty fast and eventually fails.

  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Sunday May 08, 2016 @12:41PM (#52071217) Journal

    This is just another way to isolate inmates and dehumanize them so they have fewer resources and less meaningful, human contact. This is how they strip a person of every last vestige of their humanity.

    I understand that for long-distance scenarios this video-visitation could be a good thing, but to prevent people from meeting in person is wrong and abusive.

    Welcome to the Prison Industrial Complex, where you're not an inmate, you're a profit-center. Heaven forbid they use Skype, which actually works- no, lets use our proprietary "solution" that's not worth a shit and doesn't actually work. Because if we used Skype we couldn't charge an arm and a leg for our "service".

    Some things should not be run for profit, including schools, police services, hospitals, and prisons.

    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      Some things should not be run for profit, including schools, police services, hospitals, and prisons.

      Why shouldn't prisons be paid by how well they rehabilitate their clients?

      • Why shouldn't prisons be paid by how well they rehabilitate their clients?

        1) They aren't "clients". They're inmates. A client is someone who pays a professional for a service. An inmate is someone we pay to have incarcerated. They use two different words because those are two different things.

        2) The other reason is because prisons aren't for rehabilitating people anymore, no matter what the "Welcome To Prison" brochure says.

        Seriously, they don't give a shit about rehabilitating anyone, they just want to warehouse people and keep them off the streets. Anyone that tells you differe

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Sunday May 08, 2016 @12:51PM (#52071287)
    The prison system is being run by for-profit companies. Those companies actually want the prison population to increase and for prisoners to continually return to prison after their release. It makes the shareholders happy and wealthy.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      This.
      Instead of paying the prisons per prisoner, the government should pay less for repeat offenders.
      This will give those companies a reason to rehabilitate people.
      Better yet, don't try to shoehorn something that is clearly a government concern into the private sector.
      Otherwise, why pay for the prisoners at all?
      Surely the free market can take care of itself without government handouts?

  • by Wiseleo ( 15092 ) on Sunday May 08, 2016 @02:29PM (#52071727) Homepage

    An associate got jailed and I "visited" him twice in Glynn county jail in Georgia.

    That was the only quick way I could initiate contact from outside. Other ways include sending postcards by mail... The system uses low-end webcams and offers no privacy to the inmate. They don't use a handset, which means audio gets overheard by other inmates. Camera was aimed too high. I could see other inmates. "Visits" at that facility need to be done at specific times and are limited to 15 minutes. I gave him some vital information and setup schedule for for when I would be available to accept his calls.

    By contrast, inmates can make a phone call that gets billed to the person outside seemingly at any time. They can make repeated phone calls and the amount of contact seems to be limited mostly by the wallet of the person outside. They use a phone handset, which offers improved audio quality and privacy with regards to other inmates.

    My phone bill from PayTel was allegedly 21 cents per minute, but the actual blended rate once you incorporate all the fees is 36.6 cents.

  • by Beeftopia ( 1846720 ) on Sunday May 08, 2016 @03:31PM (#52072025)

    So, I know a felon, a guy who incarcerated for felony theft. He was a real treacherous shitbag before he went in, but now, he's quite polite (I'm sure he's still quite treacherous but I have no interest in finding out). No more late night parties, his house (yes, there is money in his family, so he has a house) is lights out relatively early in the evening. I think prison had quite the correct effect on this guy. It seems to have deterred him from future criminality.

    Prison should deter people, both those who have committed crimes so they don't want to return, and those who don't with to have a stay in the first place.

    This nonsense about 'everyone is a criminal - you're committing crimes right now' - is nonsense. I haven't seen a shred of evidence to support such a thing (which I how I make decisions on the accuracy of claims).

    If you have a panic attack whenever you see a cop, that would seem to warrant an examination of your own life. Don't ride dirty. Don't have guns, drugs or drug paraphernalia on you or in your car.

    Are there bad cops? Of course. Do they make up more than a tiny minority of cops? No. I haven't seen a lick of evidence to suggest otherwise.

    Lionizing criminals, which I remember in the 70s and 80s only leads to a lot of innocent people suffering. Criminals should be held to account for their actions.

    • by imidan ( 559239 ) on Sunday May 08, 2016 @09:18PM (#52073101)

      If you have a panic attack whenever you see a cop, that would seem to warrant an examination of your own life. Don't ride dirty. Don't have guns, drugs or drug paraphernalia on you or in your car.

      I don't have a panic attack when I see a cop, but I *am* acutely aware that the cops are not my friend. I don't really know what constitutes 'riding dirty'. I don't have guns, drugs, or drug paraphernalia in my car. But if a cop has a notion to fuck up my day and my car because I'm driving through his shitty little town and they make their revenues by making bullshit traffic stops and ginning up cause to search my car and stealing any cash I have through civil forfeiture, there is absolutely nothing I can do about it. I'm completely powerless in that situation, and a lot of the creepy fucks who are attracted to police work get their jollies by taking advantage of that power imbalance. Or maybe they're just corrupt and greedy. Their motivation doesn't matter that much.

      There are plenty of examples of this behavior in news reports. There is no reason to believe it can't happen to me. I mean, here's one from just a few days ago, where the only reason the victims had their money (~$50,000) returned is that they were a Christian band who had raised the money for an orphanage, and that kind of thing makes bad headlines. http://dailysignal.com/2016/04... [dailysignal.com]?

Children begin by loving their parents. After a time they judge them. Rarely, if ever, do they forgive them. - Oscar Wilde

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