... in Australia
8/15/2005 4:52:59 PM
Sydney
8/15/2005 4:55:25 PM
They were testing a speed camera system in Charlotte a few months ago. I'm not sure if they are still doing it or not.
8/15/2005 6:04:03 PM
I have been under the impression that the legal system in the USA grants a person the right to confront their accuser, thus providing a sizeable loophole for camera tickets. Is this true?
8/15/2005 6:07:22 PM
you can see your accuserits the officer that signs the back of the ticket they mail you
8/15/2005 6:10:01 PM
^ Very wrong. You're being accused by the state. Thus, you face their representitive, the DA or ADA.
8/15/2005 6:11:03 PM
well anyways, you can see someonesafelight (or whoever is around here) told me it was the officer
8/15/2005 6:16:27 PM
its not considered a moving violationits treated like a parking ticket basicallyone doesn't need to see the officer that leaves a ticket on your windshield wiper.
8/15/2005 6:42:40 PM
I don't understand what the big deal. Wilmington has had cameras for years, and after the first few months, I rarely saw issues about it in the news. You just are a little more cautious at those intersections, which is their purpose.
8/15/2005 7:22:11 PM
^READ: SPEED NOT: RED LIGHT
8/15/2005 7:24:20 PM
I remember they implimented mobile speed cameras in Hawaii a few years back. There were a rediculous number of tickets issued. Radio shows would camera reports telling drivers where the ambushes were reportedly located that day. Public furor got so high that the state government was forced to take them out of service. (They worked perfectly fine otherwise...)This also reminds me of the ticketing system they used on the New Jersey turnpike. They would ticket you based upon the time it took for you to get from one exit to another; essentially, they knew the minimum time it would take for you to go from one exit to the next on the turnpike, and if you got off the turnpike under that minimum, they could calculate how much you were speeding and issue you a ticket. The system worked extremely well, but people got so pissed that they finally had to remove it.
8/16/2005 1:56:41 PM
8/16/2005 2:22:53 PM
im surprised they even thought that enforcing the letter of the law would be pragmatic.
8/16/2005 2:27:50 PM
this is already posted - i believe in the lounge possibly or soapbox
8/16/2005 2:37:02 PM
This had to do with the MD5 hash that was created from the image. Apparently, they used it to store the speed as well as other information.A Chinese group were able to change info. from the image while leaving the MD5 hash the same as the original.That's why the guy won his dispute.http://www.theregister.com/2005/08/11/oz_speed_camera_case/
8/16/2005 3:39:50 PM
8/16/2005 7:11:29 PM
Windows uses it... I believe.And most open-source programs use an MD5 hash to ensure that what you downloaded is legit.Yes, this could be a big problem. I don't know of any other programs off the top of my head that use MD5 for encryption.[Edited on August 17, 2005 at 1:04 PM. Reason : add]
8/17/2005 1:02:12 PM