Consulting Consultants IT Consulting
Search 180systems.com       
News Letter Signup
Home
About Us
Our People
Business Consultants
References
Clients
Services
System Selection
Business Process Review
Corporate Diagnostic
Business Case
IT Audit
HR Management
IT Infrastructure
Strategic Planning
IT Project Management
Technology White Papers
Technology Seminars
News & Articles
180 Blog
ERP Systems1
BI2
PSA3
CRM4
SCM5
BPR6
Business Case
Sarbanes-Oxley
IT Strategy
IT Project Management
Office Productivity
Internet
IT Marketing
IT Security
IT Humour
Buyers Guide
Software Selection
Business Case
Total Cost of Ownership
Software Implementation
Accounting Software
Distribution Software
Manufacturing Software
BI2
PSA3
CRM4
Resellers
Software Reviews
ERP Comparison1
ERP Reviews1
ERP Customer Survey1
BI Comparison2
BI Reviews2
PSA Comparison3
CRM Comparison4
Case Studies
Accounting Systems
Manufacturing Software
PSA3
CRM4
White Papers
ERP1
CPM7
What's New
Articles
Events
Contact Us
Office
Careers
Site Map

Business Technology

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Watching the Watchers: Why Surveillance Is a Two-Way Street

January 2008 from Popular Mechanics “The recent boom in video monitoring—by both the state and businesses—means we're all being watched. It's like something out of George Orwell's 1984. Except that, unlike Orwell's protagonist Winston Smith, we can watch back—and plenty of people are doing just that. Which makes a difference.

The widespread installation of recording devices is not all bad: ATM cameras helped prove that Duke students accused of rape couldn't have committed the crime. And we all sympathize with the goals of preventing terrorism and crime, though it is not proven that security cameras accomplish this.

Nonetheless, the trend toward constant surveillance is troubling. And even if the public became concerned enough to pass laws limiting the practice, it's not clear how well those laws would work. Government officials and private companies too often ignore privacy laws…

The widespread availability of digital cameras and video-capable cellphones means that ubiquitous surveillance on the part of the little guys is moving, if anything, even faster than ubiquitous surveillance on the part of the big boys. And distribution tools like YouTube make it easier to get the footage to a large audience.”

180 View – 9/11 changed everything. It seems that most people are ok with less privacy in favour of more security. Technology is also changing everything when it comes to privacy vs security. Some claim that satellites in space can already read a license plate. London’s so-called Ring of Steel, is an extensive web of cameras and roadblocks designed to detect, track and deter terrorists. New York is in the process of doing something similar. According an article entitled “Surveillance: A New Look at Big Brother” published by CIO Today on December 26, 2007, “There are about 30 million surveillance cameras in the U.S. -- inside ATM machines, at traffic lights, in department store dressing rooms.” How long will it be when the cameras can find someone based on a retina scan?

Labels:

1 Comments:

Anonymous Robin said...

9/11 didn't change everything. It changed things in the US with increased paranoia about some thing of their own making. To a lesser degree Canada suffers from the same ingnorance. This paranoia has become mantra for reduction in North American security under the guise of increased security. We are so busy watching nothing that the likely hood that some thing would get past secuirty is much higher now than ever before. The ability to process the amount of information coming in is too great.
The reality is the majority of the rest of the world could care less and frankly rightly so. You can only be a fortress for so long before things start to collapse under the weight of maintaining the security.

January 14, 2008  

Post a Comment

<< Home

 

 
1enterprise resource planning | 2business intelligence | 3professional services automation
4customer relationship management | 5supply chain management | 6business process re-engineering
  © 2004 One Hundred & Eighty Degrees Systems Limited. All Rights Reserved
Web Site optimized by Toronto Search Engine Optimization | resources