CCTV and
other visual surveillance
This page looks at the "privatisation" of public space through
closed circuit television (CCTV) in streets and other places.
It also considers questions posed by the use of webcams,
phonecams and ANPR systems.
It covers -
cctv and the privatisation of public space
video surveillance legislation
webcams
phonecams
ANPR
CCTV
Use of closed circuit television cameras by government
agencies (police, hospitals, schools, rail and road
authorities) and private bodies (retailers, taxi operators,
private security services) continues to increase.
In the UK it has been claimed that the average citizen is
captured by 300 cameras each day, that there were around 1.5
million cameras in 400 communities as of 2002 (with 40,000
operated by local government, up from 100 in 1990), and that
distinctions between private and public space are eroding.
In January 2004 Clive Norris suggested that the number of
cameras had risen to "at least" 4,285,000, supposedly making
Britain the most-watched nation in the world, with estimates
that the UK accounts for one-fifth of all CCTV cameras
worldwide. In 2005 the London transportation system reported
that it had 6,000 cameras across its network, with 9,000
planned by 2010. Images from the cameras - few of which were
digital and many apparently in poor condition - were typically
kept for 14 days before being erased or taped over. As of 2005
the NSW government reported that there were 7,000 cameras in
Sydney alone.
Felix Stalder, in his 2002 paper on The Voiding of Privacy
(PDF), suggests that
Most contemporary conceptions of privacy are based on a notion
of a separation between the individual and the environment. On
the one side of this boundary lies "the private", on the other
lies "the public". The boundary, or gap, between the two
spheres is controlled by the individual. Invasion of privacy
means the intrusion of a "public" actor into the realm of the
"private" without the individual's consent. This notion is
clearly visible in the approach to privacy prevalent in
Europe, particularly in Germany. Here, privacy is translated
into "informational self-determination", that is, the right of
individuals to police the boundary, to decide themselves which
information they are willing to disclose under what
conditions. Such a conception of privacy, far from being
universal, is in fact historically specific. Its rise (and
decline) is part of a particular cultural condition connected
to the dominance of print media from the 16th to the 20th
century. As electronic communications rise in importance,
print culture, part of which is the notion of privacy, erodes.
Others, particularly in the US, have noted traditional
thinking that privacy is restricted to what goes on behind
closed doors or in your head. It does not embrace activity in
public space or that might be observed from public space (eg
from an adjacent rooftop or via an aerial photograph).
One web cam vendor crowed that with video, there's not a whole
lot of restrictions. You can do it anywhere except where
someone can reasonably expect privacy ... I can basically
follow you around all day, as long as I don't follow you into
a public restroom or something. [Debate about photography in
private and semi-private places - and pointers to judgments
such as exemplary damages of US$500 million to 46 athletes
filmed without their knowledge by cameras hidden in restrooms,
locker rooms and showers - features in a note elsewhere on
this site.]
David Banisar of EPIC responded that just because you're
walking down a public street doesn't mean that the government
or any other person should have the right to follow you around
wherever you go and take notes of who you see and what you do.
In the US state and federal courts have generally disagreed
with that comment, particularly where surveillance was
conducted by the media.
Eugene Volokh thus notes the First Amendment in commenting
that
the chief protection we have against intrusive news-gathering,
then, is traditional real property law: we can keep people off
our property but we can't keep them off the public sidewalk,
even if they're gathering embarrassing information about us
The Canadian Privacy Commissioner had a different view,
consistent with Canada's human rights and privacy regime, in
criticising local government use of CCTV as a breach of the
federal privacy legislation.
He commented (PDF) that
If we cannot walk or drive down the street without being
systematically monitored by the cameras of the state, our
lives and our society will be irretrievably altered. The
psychological impact of having to live in a sense of
constantly being observed must surely be enormous, indeed
incalculable. We will have to adapt, and adapt we undoubtedly
will. But something profoundly precious - our right to feel
anonymous and private as we go about our day-to-day lives will
have been lost forever.
David Brin's The Transparent Society (Reading: Perseus Books
1998), noted earlier in this guide, suggests that the problem
with surveillance of public places is one of equity. 'They'
observe us (and can integrate that observation with databases
that have significant impacts on our lives). 'We' are observed
but often aren't aware of being observed, have no choice in
being observed and - more importantly - aren't in a position
to watch the watchers or use our knowledge about their
observation.
One response has been street theatre such as World
Sousveillance Day (WSD) and suggestions from cyberlibertarians
such as John Gilmore that the 'watched' invade the privacy of
the watchers (or merely those unlucky enough to live in the
vicinity).
Another has been a range of mapping exercises by community
groups, including the EU Urbaneye Project ("On the Threshold
to Urban Panopticon?"), the Washington DC Observing
Surveillance Project and iSee in New York. The anarchists at
RTMark offer a Guide to CCTV Destruction, perhaps reflecting
Reg Whitaker's overheated The End of Privacy: How Total
Surveillance Is Becoming A Reality (New York: New Press 1999).
Arthur Cockfield's 2001 Who Watches the Watchers? (PDF)
highlights some regulatory issues; others are explored in the
'CCTV Issue' (Vol 2/3) of Surveillance & Society
Brin's assessment is broadly endorsed by Joshua Meyrowitz in
No Sense of Place: The Impact of Electronic Media on Social
Behaviour (Oxford: Oxford Uni Press 1986), The Spy in the
Coffee Machine: (The End of Privacy as We Know It) (Oxford:
One World 2008) by Kieron O'Hara & Nigel Shadbolt and Ross
Clark's The Road to Southend Pier (Petersfield: Harriman House
2007). There is a more nuanced analysis of issues and
responses in The Electronic Eye: The Rise of the Surveillance
Society (Minneapolis: Uni of Minnesota Press 1994), in
Surveillance Society: Monitoring Everyday Life (Buckingham:
Open Uni Press 2001) and in Surveillance as Social Sorting:
Privacy, Risk & Digital Discrimination (London: Routledge
2002) by David Lyon.
There is a less philosophical analysis in Surveillance, Closed
Circuit Television & Social Control (Aldershot: Ashgate 1998)
edited by Clive Norris, Jade Moran & Gary Armstrong and in The
Maximum Surveillance Society: The Rise of CCTV (Oxford: Berg
1999) by Clive Norris.
Background on the uptake of CCTV in the US is provided by the
2002 report on Public & Private Applications of Video
Surveillance and Biometric Technologies (PDF) by Marcus Nieto,
Kimberly Johnston-Dodds & Charlene Simmons.
For Australia a starting point is provided by the report of
the Australian Institute of Criminology Comparative Study of
Establishment & Operation of Public CCTV in Australia, the
associated 2003 Open-street CCTV in Australia (PDF) report by
Dean Wilson & Adam Sutton, their 2004 Open-Street CCTV in
Australia: The Politics of Resistance and Expansion (PDF) and
the 2005 note An overview of the effectiveness of closed
circuit television (CCTV) surveillance by Nigel Brew of the
federal Parliamentary Library.
Jeffrey Rosen in The Naked Crowd: Reclaiming Security and
Freedom in an Anxious Age (New York: Random House 2004)
comments that
CCTV cameras have a mysterious knack for justifying themselves
regardless of what happens to crime. When crime goes up, the
cameras get credit for detecting it, and when crime goes down,
they get the credit for preventing it.
There is no consensus on the effectiveness of public CCTV as a
deterrent or an effective mechanism for responding to crime,
although there are strong suggestions that the technological
fix is overrated and oversold. Organisations responding to the
"need to be doing something" are susceptible to spending money
on equipment acquisition and deployment without appropriate
investment in ongoing monitoring.
In practice the value of CCTV is often forensic - as a tool
for identifying what happened - rather preventive, something
that is unsurprising as some images are not closely monitored
("no one is actually watching what's seen by the eye in the
sky"), image quality is poor or devices are not working, and
help is not readily at hand if the observer does identify an
incident.
Bruce Schneier commented in 2008 that
To some, it's comforting to imagine vigilant police monitoring
every camera, but the truth is very different. Most CCTV
footage is never looked at until well after a crime is
committed. When it is examined, it's very common for the
viewers not to identify suspects. Lighting is bad and images
are grainy, and criminals tend not to stare helpfully at the
lens. Cameras break far too often. The best camera systems can
still be thwarted by sunglasses or hats. Even when they afford
quick identification — think of the 2005 London transport
bombers and the 9/11 terrorists — police are often able to
identify suspects without the cameras. Cameras afford a false
sense of security, encouraging laziness when we need police to
be vigilant.
The solution isn't for police to watch the cameras. Unlike an
officer walking the street, cameras only look in particular
directions at particular locations. Criminals know this, and
can easily adapt by moving their crimes to someplace not
watched by a camera — and there will always be such places.
Additionally, while a police officer on the street can respond
to a crime in progress, the same officer in front of a CCTV
screen can only dispatch another officer to arrive much later.
By their very nature, cameras result in underused and
misallocated police resources.
Examples of the literature are the 1999 paper by Jason Ditton,
Emma Short, Clive Norris et al on The effect of closed circuit
television cameras on recorded crime rates and public concern
about crime in Glasgow, a broader 2001 study of Sydney, the
2002 UK Home Office report (PDF) by Brandon Welsh & David
Farrington on Crime Prevention Effects of Closed Circuit
Television: A Systematic Review, David Flaherty's 1998 report
Video surveillance by Public Bodies, papers in Surveillance of
Public Space: CCTV, Street Lighting and Crime Prevention
(Monsey: Criminal Justice Press 1999) edited by Kate Painter &
Nick Tilley, the 2008 study CCTV Camera Evaluation: The crime
reduction effects of public CCTV cameras in the City of
Philadelphia, PA installed during 2006 (PDF) by Jerry
Ratcliffe & Travis Taniguchi.
video surveillance legislation
Most legislation regarding video surveillance has centred on
its use in the workplace and its use by government agencies or
commercial operators on a covert basis within private spaces,
rather than use in public spaces.
That reflects uncertainty about "reasonable expectations of
privacy" and whether privacy and public space are
antithetical, along with perceptions that problems can be
addressed through existing privacy or other legislation.
The Australian regime (outlined here and discussed in more
detail in a supplementary profile) at the federal and state
levels includes the 1998 NSW Workplace Video Surveillance Act
(WVSA) and a range of state/teritory listening or surveillance
device enactments noted here.
The regime reflects reports such as the 1995 Invisible Eyes
study by the NSW Privacy Committee and 2001 NSW Law Reform
Commission Surveillance report. The Victorian Law Reform
Commission is due to report in 2003 on public and workplace
surveillance issues.
Overseas the UK House of Commons Culture, Media & Sport
committee announced in December 2002 an investigation of
privacy and media regulation, following criticism of
paparazzi, calls for rights of publicity legislation and
claims that there are no UK legislative restrictions on the
provision to media or other users of of CCTV recordings made
by government agencies or private bodies surveilling 'public'
areas.
The UK currently requires registration under the 1998 Data
Protection Act of those CCTV systems that "process data"; the
Act and Human Rights Act 1998 articulate principles for
consent (eg signs in carparks and retail premises) and data
handling.
An overview of developments across the EU is provided in
Urbaneye's 2002 On the Threshold to Urban Panopticon:
Analysing the Employment of CCTV in European Cities and
Assessing its Social & Political Impacts paper (PDF).
The Public & Private Applications report (PDF) by Nieto,
Johnston-Dodds & Simmons noted above highlights US
legislation.
webcams
Theorist Jim Cross argues that
a webcam in your own home is a voluntary rendering public of
what would normally be private, a throwing open of your house
to an indeterminately large and anonymous public. I would
suggest that this needs to be seen in a communal context: this
is not a case of one person throwing their world open for
public inspection but, rather, joining the ranks of people who
are making a relatively high profile appearance on the Web.
How far this makes them a member of a Web 'community' hinges
to a large extent on what is understood by that term. But I
suspect the idea of 'sharing' is important in understanding
what is going on here
As with blogs, a case of 'in the future everyone will be
famous to 15 people, rather than for 15 seconds' and "surveillant
narcissism"? What of webcams in public places (rather than
dinky little cameras set up by the proud owners of coffee pots
or to allow the community to share in the bedroom gymnastics)?
Opinions are divided, with most observers suggesting that the
low resolution and lack of contextual information mean that
images captured on many webcams in public places - such as
those developed by Earthcam - don't breach the letter or
spirit of privacy law. That may change, however, as more
consumers go onto broadband and imaging technology improves.
One disturbing example is the 'abortioncam.com' dispute,
involving several sites - of which the abortioncam.com is the
most prominent - that have positioned high-quality webcams
opposite womens' health centres and other medical facilities.
The sites have featured images of visitors to those locations,
in some instances along with identifying information such as
vehicle license plate numbers and more specific data such as
the name of an individual patient, her medical records, town
and age of her child.
Breach of privacy under US law? No, the cameras cover public
space and distribution of the images is protected as free
speech, say some observers such as Eugene Volokh. Others
suggest that the cams cannot legitimately claim a 'public
interest' defence and that mere disclosure of recourse to
medical help is likely breach protection under HIPAA of
medical record data.
Another example, noted here, here and in Michael Clements'
2005 paper Virtually Free from Punishment until Proven Guilty:
The Internet, Web-Cameras and the Compelling Necessity
Standard (PDF) was installation of a webcam in the Maricopa
(Arizona) jail jail, with visitors to the jail site initially
having unrestricted views of people being booked, strip
searched or visiting the bathroom.
phone and other cams
US and other law is currently grappling with voyeurcams,
upskirtcams and other nasties in notes on the Adult Content
industry and on Unauthorised Photography.
Uptake of digital cameras and more recently camera-equipped
phones (now estimated to comprise around 25% of the 600
million or so mobile phones sold each year) has driven
internet access to 'up skirt', 'down blouse' or other voyeur
genres - typically surreptitious photos taken under the doors
of lavatory cubicles or in a public shower or change room. The
technology has allowed amateurs and professionals to take
snaps of unsuspecting men, women and children, which can then
be published on the net without major difficulty.
The amount of photographing and its audience is unclear.
Projectvoyeur.com, claimed as a pioneering free site,
supposedly attracts over 600,000 visitors a day.
Responses have varied. South Korea has moved to restrict sales
of camera phones to models that beep when pictures are taken.
Other jurisdictions have more effectively been banned the
devices from pools, gyms, change-rooms, lavatories, schools
and even beaches.
One introduction is provided in Camera Phone Obsession
(Phoenix: Paraglyph Press 2004) by Peter Aitken.
ANPR
Automated number plate recognition (ANPR) systems, discussed
in more detail here, collect digital images of vehicle
registration numbers for real time or retrospective matching
with official databases.
That collection and matching can be for traffic congestion
pricing and road safety purposes (eg to detect vehicles that
are breaking speed limits). It may instead be used for other
law enforcement purposes, with for example real time matching
against 'hotlists' of stolen vehicles and those 'of interest'
regarding offences such as burglary, kidnapping, drug
trafficking and terrorism.
APNR cameras are often coupled with other image capture
systems, so that for example a vehicle can be tracked by video
across a precinct after initial recognition or a photograph
can be taken of the driver and passenger on the basis of a
traveler watchlist.
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