Video Surveillance Blog
« Security Cameras in Gaming | Main | South Korea's Intelligent Border Patrol-Bot »
February 6, 2007
Think Rodney King Meets YouTube
Katherine Mangu-Ward, a contributing editor to Reason magazine, recently published an editorial in the Philadelphia Inquirer with an interesting argument in support of public surveillance, especially the cameras that are appearing more and more frequently in large cities like New York and Chicago.
One major argument against public surveillance is that it is an intrusion of privacy - we should not be filmed without our own consent, and that public security cameras would be an invasion of privacy for the majority of the populace. However, Ms. Ward's argument asserts that while we are not tracked via video surveillance, nearly every move we make can be tracked somehow, whether it be through a credit card receipt or a GPS unit on a cell phone. Our electronic devices, she claims, have mostly eradicated our concept of privacy in public.
However, according to Mangu-Ward, cameras can play one vital role in securing the public: protecting them from law enforcement: "Of course, cameras can and should protect citizens from police misbehavior. Several protesters at the 2004 Republican convention in New York, for example, have beaten charges of resisting arrest with video evidence from private and public cameras. A few more cameras on the street when police fired 50 rounds at Sean Bell in Queens on Nov. 25 might have helped determine what really happened."
Personal surveillance devices (like cell phone cameras and camcorders) can also help protect public citizens from the police, Mangu-Ward adds. Recently, she said a case of police brutality hinged on footage taken from a cell phone camcorder. This kind of surveillance has precedence and it's continual presence has powerful legal and cultural implications:"Think Rodney King meets YouTube," she quips.
Listen: Interview with Mangu-Ward on NPR's Talk of the Nation
Posted by Jennifer on February 6, 2007 1:27 PM
Search
Recent Posts
- Illinois high schools ad remote monitoring and motion detection to school surveillance system
- D-Link SecuriCam PTZ Network Camera designed for whole-room monitoring
- Exacq releases exacqVision 3.0 video surveillance software for Windows, Linux, and Mac
- Grambling State University installs Axis network cameras for campus surveillance
- IndigoVision introduces new line of high-definition IP cameras
- Pet surveillance camera catches dognapper in action
- Rhode Island Convention Center transitions to IP video security with Milestone XProtect Enterprise software
- Water reservoir security camera catches late-night hijinks
- Network cameras will make up 50% of surveillance landscape in 2013, report says
- Surveillance cameras garnering results in Newark
Categories
- Banks and Credit Unions
- Bars
- Business
- Churches
- Citizen Surveillance
- Construction
- Controversial
- Convenience Stores
- Courthouse
- Crime
- Economics
- Elder care
- Entertainment
- Farming and Agriculture
- Food Service
- Fraud
- Gaming and Casinos
- Gas Stations
- Government
- Graffiti
- Health Clubs
- Healthcare
- Helpful Hints
- Home Security
- Homeland Security
- Hotels & Resorts
- IP Surveillance Industry
- In the news
- Industrial
- Law Enforcement
- Laws and Regulations
- Libraries
- Malls
- Military
- Municipal
- Neighborhood
- Nightclubs
- Oddly True
- Office
- Outdoor
- Parking Lots
- Pet Surveillance
- Post Office
- Products
- Restaurants
- Retail
- Schools and Universities
- Security
- Shoplifting and Theft
- Site News
- Sporting Events
- Sports
- Surveillance
- Surveillance and Society
- Technology
- Tourism
- Traffic/Roadways
- Transportation
- Unique and Interesting
- Vandalism
- Video Management Software
- YouTube
- Zoos
