Police Will Pilot a Program To Live-Stream Amazon Ring Cameras (eff.org) 84
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Electronic Frontier Foundation: This is not a drill. Red alert: The police surveillance center in Jackson, Mississippi, will be conducting a 45-day pilot program to live stream the Amazon Ring cameras of participating residents. Now, our worst fears have been confirmed. Police in Jackson, Mississippi, have started a pilot program that would allow Ring owners to patch the camera streams from their front doors directly to a police Real Time Crime Center. The footage from your front door includes you coming and going from your house, your neighbors taking out the trash, and the dog walkers and delivery people who do their jobs in your street. In Jackson, this footage can now be live streamed directly onto a dozen monitors scrutinized by police around the clock. Even if you refuse to allow your footage to be used that way, your neighbor's camera pointed at your house may still be transmitting directly to the police.
Only a few months ago, Jackson stood up for its residents, becoming the first city in the southern United States to ban police use of face recognition technology. Clearly, this is a city that understands invasive surveillance technology when it sees it, and knows when police have overstepped their ability to invade privacy. If police want to build a surveillance camera network, they should only do so in ways that are transparent and accountable, and ensure active resident participation in the process. If residents say "no" to spy cameras, then police must not deploy them. The choices you and your neighbors make as consumers should not be hijacked by police to roll out surveillance technologies. The decision making process must be left to communities.
Only a few months ago, Jackson stood up for its residents, becoming the first city in the southern United States to ban police use of face recognition technology. Clearly, this is a city that understands invasive surveillance technology when it sees it, and knows when police have overstepped their ability to invade privacy. If police want to build a surveillance camera network, they should only do so in ways that are transparent and accountable, and ensure active resident participation in the process. If residents say "no" to spy cameras, then police must not deploy them. The choices you and your neighbors make as consumers should not be hijacked by police to roll out surveillance technologies. The decision making process must be left to communities.
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"Not how privacy works bucko"
There's no privacy expectation in public, including the street in from of your house.
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Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy, in **1998** - "You have no privacy. Get over it."
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Re: "of participating residents" (Score:3)
"Normal people dislike criminals and would gladly participate in such a program"
Wow, I want to meet these "normal people" posters keep bantering on about.
Also your "if you are not a criminal, you got nothing to hide" holds no water. Let's not forget about pesky facts such as selective enforcement, vindictiveness, and now deep fakes if they really dislike someone, shall we?
We need the police. We don't need them to be the "Eye of God".
Normal normal normal (Score:2)
Really, this is done to make one group look superior while making the other look inferior, stupid, and too weird to function.
"Normal" is just another version of the straw man, and a cheap shot at that.
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Modded -1, Uncomfortable Truth.
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The Marxists on Slashdot pretend to hate the police. Of course, when something bad happens they always call them first, but they are tough Internet guys. Normal people dislike criminals and would gladly participate in such a program.
Actually, I and my neighbors tend to go out all Dirty Harry-like and handle the problems ourselves. But of course we're in a rural area where police response time may be an hour. So we're still a bunch of tough Internet guys as evidenced by the POE cables usually draped around their genitals and hooked to a tractor alternator.
Re: "of participating residents" (Score:2)
"The Marxists"
Such a very overused and misused word these days.
Re: "of participating residents" (Score:2)
Sounds like a good sitcom. Four brothers try to create a workers paradise in downtown Freedonia.
"You a wanna share a the means of production of tutsi frutsi ice-a-creama?"
*honk honk*
Re: "of participating residents" (Score:2)
It's to the point now that anyone that suggests anything even remotely "socialist" must be a raging hammer and sicke loving Soviet. :\
"Marxist" has been watered down to the point of being meaningless
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The Marxists on Slashdot pretend to hate the police. Of course, when something bad happens they always call them first, but they are tough Internet guys. Normal people dislike criminals and would gladly participate in such a program.
Actually, I and my neighbors tend to go out all Dirty Harry-like and handle the problems ourselves. But of course we're in a rural area where police response time may be an hour. So we're still a bunch of tough Internet guys as evidenced by the POE cables usually draped around their genitals and hooked to a tractor alternator.
"This is a beowulf cluster, the most powerful computer system in the world, and it'll take your head clean off. Now, I don't rightly remember if I have six processors left or only five. So the question for you is, 'Do I feel lucky?'
"Well, do ya...soiboi?"
Police surveillance center? (Score:2)
You mean they already had one of those set up? Does every big PD have a "surveillance center?"
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well the federal government isn't going to dole out its APCs and rocket launchers, unless theyhave a surveillance center. it pays for itself!
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Well, yes. If they want to take advantage of the free money from Fatherland Security (and of course they want it) then they need to set up some sort of centralized monitoring center. They have access to all the traffic cameras and in some places the smart streetlights, IoT sewer water sensors that monitor drug usage by neighborhood served, any drones that they use, and in at least one city they have a reader at several off ramps that records vehicle tire stem RFID chips.
Don't tell the ridiculous twits her
Re: Fuck you, assholes. (Score:2)
But but but Think Of The Children(TM) and keeping the Taliban and ISIS from peeking into your bathroom window!
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The Police are supposed to be your friends. What the hell is wrong with you people?
Better question -- what is wrong with the police?
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>The Police are supposed to be your friends. What the hell is wrong with you people?
Surely you're joking.
But, taken literally, your statement would be correct. They are supposed to be your friends. You know, protect general order, de-escalate situations, walk {gasp} or drive the beat to make their presence regularly known, be approachable, not treat every citizen as a suspect, not support racists, not think they are judge, jury, and executioner all in one. But we don't have that.
Things can be changed, bu
Eventually: 4th Amendment issue (Score:2)
2. Failing that, I think this will eventually become an issue of interpreting the 4th Amendment; when it was written there were no 'surveillance cameras', cops had to be physically present to 'surveil' you. This is something entirely different, and if America doesn't say 'Hell, no!' then I'd hope the Supreme Court would interpret the Constitution to disallow this sort of shit as violating the 4th Amendment.
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The people in Jackson Mississippi have plenty of democratic control to stop this should they choose, why do you hate democracy? Why do you want your preferred set of non democratically elected geriatric farts to impose their totalitarian control over those people?
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Their Mayor controls the Chief of Police and with it the surveillance program, they don't need the supreme court. They can just vote in a Mayor who opposes it.
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The Mayor does appoint the Chief of Police, the Chief of Police does have control over his department, the people of Jackson can just vote in another Mayor next election. They don't need the Supreme Court.
Of course Hitler got elected and all, the people of Jackson might be shitlords who need the Supreme Court to tell them how to live. Democracy doesn't work.
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Re: Eventually: 4th Amendment issue (Score:2)
No. Local politics clearly allows the people of Jackson a ton of ways to address this, to say they need to be saved from themselves by the Supreme Court is paternalistic and anti-democratic.
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Something can be perfectly legal and yet undesirable. The court system isn't designed to protect people from that. The way to deal with a legal government program you don't like is to elect people who also don't like it.
The Fourth Amendment establishes some rights. It doesn't deal with massive automatic surveillance or data mining, and therefore there is no clear Constitutional ban on them.
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which there certainly would be!
Ah, you dewy-eyed optimist, in England police have access to over two million cameras and the "pushback" hasn't been loud enough to awaken a paranoid mouse.
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Rational arguments and facts don't seem to convince the public any more, if they can whip up the fear there won't be any meaningful resistance. That was my actual point, I'm quite aware of what England's 'panopticon' has accomplished (almost nothing). The police themselves say that two million cameras have allowed them to prevent "dozens" of crimes, not hundreds or even scores, a few dozen over a decade.
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Might even help explain why obesity is such a problem: constant fear and anxiety raise cortisol levels, which sabotage fat burning. Also makes you want to self-soothe with food, or alcohol, or both.
No, I'm n
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It's safe to expect the following:
I'll offer access to my camera for $20/hr (Score:2)
Otherwise go fuck yourself
Worst fear (Score:5, Insightful)
. Now, our worst fears have been confirmed.
That's not my worst fear, I promise.
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Let me guess. . . clowns?
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Here are some. How about #1.
https://www.ranker.com/list/pe... [ranker.com]
Just another episode of Cops... (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, if they allowed live streaming from the cameras in their cars and badge cams, that would be interesting.
Re: Just another episode of Cops... (Score:2)
That will happen when the PD is forced to order the Super Duper Real-Time AI Blockchain Quantum Internet forever camera system infused with Synergy and Love, commanded by politicians who think the CD tray in their computers is the cup holder.
Then a 12 year old will crack the system and make live streams available to the entire planet.
Snitch culture (Score:1)
The Soviet Union could only dream about this. Imagine if they had a camera on every house, instead of relying on a school kid to turn in his parents for some extra food rations.
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Re: Snitch culture (Score:2)
Back in the late 1960s, my parents took a tour of Czechoslovakia. They told me that the people looked very unhappy and grim, and the restraurants sold bland food.
Not all of Eastern Europe was like this, but most of it was.
In Russia, at least, it was common for the government to have kids turn in their parents for "unpatriotic thoughts and activities", no doubt holding a threat/reward in front of their faces to encourage this.
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The food in eastern Europe is traditionally pretty bland. Much of the very bland Midwest diet is based on it (not the Velveeta or the jello salads though, those are specifically American inventions.)
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Drove through East Germany a few months after reunification to get to Berlin. The guard towers at every highway intersection were eerie.
I Am Glad It Is Just The Police (Score:4, Insightful)
that can do this. Any other organization would have bad actors taking advantage of the situation. O wait..
Worst fear? Not really. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Won't matter anyway unless the bike is stupidly expensive. Unless it rises to the level of a felony ($1000 in most states) most police departments won't allocate any resources to investigate because prosecutors won't bother with it. Even if you know who took it and exactly where your property is because you can see it from the street.
FOIA - request copy from police (Score:1)
Great! So now I can do an FOIA (state version vice federal) and request copies of all Ring camera video the police have captured. Post those on the internet and let everyone know what those 'volunteers' are doing at their house. Or at least who is coming and going thru the front door and when.
Anybody in Mississippi that want to file to state equivalent of FOIA so they have standing to get the copies?
Is there any notice that must be posted when the Government is getting or using a video feed?
Doesn't that
This is why the GDPR is important. (Score:3)
in the EU, all of this is flat-out illegal.
And I don't mean just on a dragnet investigation level, which is a crime toi.
Worst you can do, is post warnings with precise details of who uses the data and for what, *outside* of the recorded area (so before entering it). And then you still have to have a legitimate reason. And then you can *still* be sued and lose, if it's clearly bullshit. And you have to instantly comply with any deletion requests. Yes, Amazon amd Google too.
Re:GDPR - sort of (Score:3)
True story ... (Score:2)
Lomg time ago I suggested that all cars be equipped with GPS and a kill switch that 1.) would stop car theft and 2.) quickly end police chases.
The cops I talked to said, "No!" When I asked, they said it would infringe their rights as citizens.
So, we still have cars stolen and dangerous chases.
In this matter of streamed Ring, I guess citizens can live stream anything they want to whoever they want, but when that stream is serviced and carried on taxpayer dollars, it becomes public property and ANYONE should
City cameras come to the burbs (Score:2)
The single key factor (Score:2)
I'm in favor of a program like this so long as cutting the police in on your camera feed stays discretionary. Police malpractice is a very real problem in some jurisdictions, but if it is happening in your neighborhood then people will simply not opt for this program. In fact, membership in this program will be a valuable indicator of police trust in each neighborhood.
I see another potential advantage: people are more likely to maintain their own security equipment than the city or state will, and will only
Are we talking motion sensing cameras here? (Score:1)
Can I fence in my front yard now? (Score:2)
In most residential areas in the US, owners are not allowed to put a privacy fence in their front yard.
If my neighbor's Ring camera is allowed to stream my front yard, because there is no expectation of privacy, then perhaps I should be able to install a privacy fence.
What could go wrong? (Score:1)
How long before the Ring camera is "racist."
That camera, it recorded black people being black people. OMG, this is terrible. It's harder for the criminals to lie. It's funny how some people think criminals tell the truth.
Pay me $1000/month (Score:2)