cctv

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Photo: Improbulus on Flickr. CC BY-NC-SA.

UK has one CCTV camera per fourteen citizens according to a research paper released in 2002 and in the harsh financial climate now facing the world the local councils in Britain has started slashing the funding used to actually monitor the cameras.

From Daily Mail (via Schneier):

“Once, Britain was the most watched nation in the world, with more than 4 million CCTV cameras monitoring our every move.

But now in these difficult economic times, it seems that Big Brother isn’t actually watching, in fact no one is.

As cash-strapped police forces and councils around the UK are forced to tighten their belts in the recession, CCTV cameras around town centres are being left unmanned as they can’t afford to pay anyone to watch out for crime as it happens.

Instead, entire networks of surveillance cameras are being effectively put on auto-pilot, with police reviewing tapes only after a reported incident.”

Does it take a recession to make people realize that an annual expense of ~£50 million on CCTV is excessive? That it never was useful? That the cost is too high in relation to what you might gain (if any)? This just verifies that the presented image of CCTV as a tool for crime prevention is false.

An another citation from the same article as above:

While in Dorset, police resorted to advertising for unpaid civilian volunteers to monitor CCTV footage after claiming that it was not cost effective to pay trained professionals.

In June Dorset Police appealed for members of the public to watch live images from street security cameras in Wimborne, Blandford, Shaftesbury and Gillingham to help spot crimes and anti-social behaviour.

Civilian volunteers? Spot “anti-social behaviour”? Since when does an untrained civilian make an educated decision on when someone is acting anti-social? That’s like asking for false positives… deluxe version…

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There’s been discussions here in Sweden on non-english blogs and forums in regards to just when a citizen should stand up and say “Stop this madness!”, instead of being caught in a machinery where you can’t protest, as you’ll be shot or jailed when doing so.

My guess is that the United Kingdom is not that very far from that point and now would be the time to stand up against the madness going on on their island. Caught this little poster via BoingBoing (with creds to Shardcore):

More CCTV means more security for you - via BoingBoing.net

*shrug*

I mean please. This single statement is an outright lie as it has been broken several times. They might provide a marginal level of increased security around the specific streets where they are, but in some cases just move the crimes to other streets in the vicinity. Not even this has been fully established though. Even Scotland Yard says CCTV monitoring do not prevent crime for crying out loud!

It feels like they’re trying to say it like a Japanese manga character or something, like “More CCTV!!! *big eyes* Means More Security For You!!!! *freakishly large smile* *happy* *happy*”… Maybe it’s just in my brain ;)

Another thing I react to as a person working with security is that there can’t be a sound risk assessment in the bottom of the decisions to put up more camera’s and set up more monitoring stations. The risk of a crime does not motivate the cost of the “protection” so to speak. This is something that Bruce Schneier mentions in his article from which I stole all the links above.

Anyways, I think that the UK is setting a bad example for Europe and the risk for the rest of the countries in the region is that our governments point at them saying “It works over there!” even though it doesn’t and then we’re back were we are with the FRA-law, EU IPRED1 and the EU Data Retention.

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