Archive for the 'Surveillance' Category

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Salt Lake City: Police to Wear Video Cameras

November 15th, 2012

Can they turn the cameras off as they’re about to beat the shit out of someone or kill them for no reason? Via: KSL: Mounted on the side of a pair of sunglasses is what Salt Lake City Police Chief Chris Burbank says is the future of police work. The body cameras work like dash […]

Google Says Government Surveillance Growing

November 14th, 2012

Captain Obvious in the house. Via: Information Week: In its sixth semiannual government Transparency Report, Google on Tuesday noted that one trend is clear: “Government surveillance is on the rise.” This may not come as a shock at a time when an FBI investigation into confrontational email messages between two women uncovered a tangentially related […]

Britain: Man Faces Questioning for Posting Burning Poppy Photo

November 13th, 2012

Via: Sky: A man has been questioned by police after an image of a burning poppy was posted on Facebook on Remembrance Sunday. Kent Police said the 19-year-old, from Canterbury, was detained on Sunday night on suspicion of making malicious telecommunications. The force said in a statement: “A man (was) interviewed by police this morning […]

Microsoft Wants to Know How Many Friends You’ve Got in Your Living Room

November 12th, 2012

I didn’t even know what this Kinect camera was for. I had to search for information on it. Wikipedia: Kinect is a motion sensing input device by Microsoft for the Xbox 360 video game console and Windows PCs. Based around a webcam-style add-on peripheral for the Xbox 360 console, it enables users to control and […]

How to Steal Data from Your Neighbor in the Cloud

November 9th, 2012

It’s not easy, but the description of the attack is pretty interesting. Via: MIT Technology Review: The new attack undermines one of the basic assumptions underpinning cloud computing: that a customer’s data is kept completely separate from data belonging to any other customer. This separation is supposedly provided by virtualization technology—software that mimics an instance […]

7 Technologies That Will Make It Easier for the Next President to Hunt and Kill You

November 6th, 2012

Via: Wired: Robotic assassination campaigns directed from the Oval Office. Cyber espionage programs launched at the president’s behest. Surveillance on an industrial scale. The White House already has an incredible amount of power to monitor and take out individuals around the globe. But a new wave of technologies, just coming online, could give those powers […]

‘Given Tablets but No Teachers, Ethiopian Children Teach Themselves’

November 2nd, 2012

“For to win one hundred victories in one hundred battles is not the acme of skill. To subdue the enemy without fighting is the acme of skill.” —Sun Tzu, The Art o War Update: Nicholas Negroponte Is the Brother of John Negroponte Reader DW tipped me off to something pretty remarkable that I hadn’t noticed […]

Court OKs Warrantless Use of Hidden Surveillance Cameras

November 1st, 2012

Via: Cnet: Police are allowed in some circumstances to install hidden surveillance cameras on private property without obtaining a search warrant, a federal judge said yesterday. CNET has learned that U.S. District Judge William Griesbach ruled that it was reasonable for Drug Enforcement Administration agents to enter rural property without permission — and without a […]

Temporal Analytics: Turning Protest Noise Into Intelligence

October 31st, 2012

Sign wavers should read this. Via: AOL: While it’s true, it’s hard to predict what people will do, it’s also increasingly true that people worldwide do emit and discuss their behavior through online social media and that can be monitored and analyzed in nearly real-time. Companies such as intelligence analysis contractor Recorded Future, which is […]

Surveillance Cameras and ‘Activity Forecasting’

October 27th, 2012

Via: Cnet: Computer software programmed to detect and report illicit behavior could eventually replace the fallible humans who monitor surveillance cameras. The U.S. government has funded the development of so-called automatic video surveillance technology by a pair of Carnegie Mellon University researchers who disclosed details about their work this week — including that it has […]

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