'Smart' CCTV could track rioters
From The BBC
23 August 2011
CCTV that can automatically monitor criminal behaviour and
track suspects is being developed by UK scientists. Researchers at Kingston University have created a system that
uses artificial intelligence to recognise specific types of behaviour, such as
someone holding a gun. The technology is capable of following a person across
multiple cameras. Privacy campaigners warned that it might be used to target
groups such as political protesters.
However, the developers insisted that their invention would
allow police to focus on law breakers and erase images of innocent civilians. The
technology works by teaching a computer to recognise specific types of public
behaviour, known as ‘trigger events’. "In riot situations, it could be
people running - a crowd might converge in a certain place," said Dr James
Orwell of Kingston
University "If
somebody pulls out a gun, people tend to run in all sorts of directions. These
movements can be detected."
When an event is triggered, the software collates video
footage from before and after the incident to record a full history of the
suspect's movements. "If a window was smashed and shop looted in a town
centre street, the technology would trace back to see who smashed the window
and then retrace his steps to see when and where he entered the town centre. "The
technology would also trace where the man had gone after leaving the
scene," said Dr Orwell. The study is part of the ADDPRIV project - a
European collaboration to build a surveillance solution that acknowledges wider
privacy concerns. A key element of the system is the automatic deletion of
surplus video data. "There is a mainland European resistance to CCTV -
tight controls on how long you can keep data," explained Dr Orwell. "This
project addresses it by saying 'This is the event - let's wrap up everything
that's relevant, then delete everything else.' "We're seeking to use surveillance to help control
society, while avoiding the Big Brother nightmare of everybody being seen all
the time," he added.
Charles Farrier from anti-surveillance campaign group No
CCTV believes that excessive security powers would leave the system open to
abuse. "Merely saying 'We promise we won't track innocent people' isn't
good enough," said Mr Farrier. "If you've got a state-run camera
system and the state wants it triggered on, say, peace activists, then they
won't be bound by the same rules as everyone else.
[Of course no one seems to have picked up on the delicious
irony about an intelligent surveillance system being developed by Dr Orwell and
his team….. Anyway – I too doubt if any in-built safeguards will be enough to
prevent the detailed tracking of anyone doing anything the authorities don’t
like. It may indeed help in riot situations (which we have had twice in
my lifetime) but I seriously doubt if that’s all they’ll be used for. We are
awash in CCTV cameras in this country already. Will making the software behind
them make us safer or more easily controlled in the future? It’s all rather…
Orwellian don’t you think?]
2 comments:
"And of course, dear citizen, if you have nothing wrong you have nothing to be worried about!"
I find the idea of being constantly watched positively disturbing...ESPECIALLY considering they can move and follow me around. I wonder if the concept of being tracked by something as inhuman as a camera triggers counter-predatory instincts inside us.
sc said: I find the idea of being constantly watched positively disturbing...ESPECIALLY considering they can move and follow me around.
I find the idea obscene...
sc said: I wonder if the concept of being tracked by something as inhuman as a camera triggers counter-predatory instincts inside us.
Possibly. Surveillance is a form of intrusion which we ignore at our peril. But the way things are going it's looking like we'll all just need to learn *counter*-surveillance techniques... [grin]
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