Looks like this is finally going to be a thing. Obama is dumping some money into it.It's interesting for a lot of reasons, but it's noteworthy that this is a technological solution, that's only enabled by recent technological advancements. There's also major issues around privacy of these things.Yeah, they can protect the public and officers equally, but what happens when police departments start mining the camera footage? Why shouldn't they be allowed to catalog OCR and face recognition data from their own body cameras? Combined with tech like this:http://cs.stanford.edu/people/karpathy/deepimagesent/Just merely having cops walk around the street could allow a dispatcher to see a live text-based log of what's going on around the city. Before a cop even calls an incident in, it could show an alert on a map, that the computer has visually identified. And because all this data starts out in the computer, it would allow police to track crime hot spots without anyone doing any extra work, just by having the right software backend to the police cameras.But would people be okay with this? Would this even be legal? in the past, TWW has not liked this kind of technology. I've often argued that if you could theoretically hire humans to do a job, it shouldn't be wrong for technology to fulfill this role. For example, you could hire thousands of humans to just sit on sidewalks and log reports of what they see, for a people at dispatch to keep an eye on what's going on. Or you could just use the data from the cameras, and have a computer handle the dirty work.Pretty crazy world we live in...
12/1/2014 4:52:29 PM
Yes, there are massive privacy concerns, and yes, this information could be datamined in a million different ways.... but, I think we're so far past privacy being a thing anymore that the potential benefits outweigh the potential damage. It's damage that has already happened IMO. If Snowden and Manning proved anything it's that our government has been spying on us and collecting all of our data for a long time now.I'm a huge privacy advocate, but the 4th amendment is dead and we've gone so far towards a surveillance state that there's no turning back now without a total reboot of the government. Best to utilize the surveillance to protect ourselves from the government and its agents at this point.
12/1/2014 4:57:31 PM
odds they're "broken" all the time?
12/1/2014 6:10:40 PM
this isnt going to change anythingcameras are racist and so are the people interpreting the data (statistics are racist)
12/1/2014 6:30:20 PM
http://gizmodo.com/why-body-cameras-arent-a-cure-all-for-police-violence-1663231540
12/1/2014 7:08:18 PM
Nope, they won't be a panacea for all that ails us, but coupled with some good legislation about records retention, public record access, and doing things like throwing out charges against non-police when video evidence is lost, destroyed, or not present would help.Ultimately I think what's needed most is a cultural shift in the eyes of judges and juries. The default stance should not be that the officer's version is more credible than that of any other person.
12/1/2014 8:18:15 PM
12/1/2014 9:34:49 PM
12/1/2014 9:49:28 PM
12/2/2014 12:08:12 PM
Definitely another part of solving the problem is reducing the overall size of the police force, and divert the resources to improved training for whoever's left. I mean, holy shit, my wife and I were on a walk the other day through a residential neighborhood on a golf course and saw 4 police cars, a fire truck, an ambulance and like 10 cops at the scene of what looked like a teenager smoking a joint while walking down the street. What the fuck.
12/2/2014 12:28:17 PM
^ well, we'll definitely have these things one day replacing police I believe:http://www.techtimes.com/articles/20371/20141118/its-not-a-dalek-its-knightscopes-k5-robot-security-guard.htmThey're already taking the jobs of some rent-a-cops. I could see a future version of this device handling the patrol duties of some officers.
12/2/2014 12:28:56 PM
^
12/2/2014 2:05:37 PM
I'm in favor of body cameras because I think the privacy argument is a bit of a stretch. Whatever the camera sees is already being seen by the officer. Officers already have "face recognition." We're enhancing their abilities somewhat while enhancing their oversight by a lot more.The "they could use it to undermine our privacy" argument doesn't hold much water with me. A lot of things could be used to undermine our privacy or mine data about us, and we don't care. A lot of things are used for those purposes, and we don't care -- I suspect even the most libertarian people on here have cell phones, customer loyalty cards, and amazon/ebay/google accounts. So we're obviously not that worked up about the concept of people using technology to record data about us. I guess what I'm saying is, I don't see the big deal. Maybe someone could explain it to me, because I'm not sure how "facial recognition software" is all that different from wanted posters and people just recognizing your damn face.
12/4/2014 10:44:31 AM
I vaguely remember that this popular design that people have been talking about has a sliding piece of plastic that allows the officer to turn it off at will. That would rather obviously defeat the point. I would doubt that they'd ever be turned on in the areas of greatest tension.
12/4/2014 10:47:01 AM
if i'm a cop and i'm following the rules, i'd want a complete record of the encounter to cover my ass. also, they can make rules requiring the use of the camera and punish officers who don't use it. an officer in Albuquerque was just fired for not having the camera on during an encounter where they shot someone.the privacy issues could be largely mitigated with some rules about record retention and use. [Edited on December 4, 2014 at 10:49 AM. Reason : .]
12/4/2014 10:49:13 AM
It would be easier to make it like a car EDR, where it always keeps a cycling buffer of the last hour or something and then stores it permanently whenever a shot is fired... which is about the easiest event to detect, of like all possible events.
12/4/2014 11:23:20 AM
cars have a nice big 12v battery source, can you make a body-mounted camera last all day without recharging? i assumed that's why they turned off.
12/4/2014 11:27:08 AM
12/5/2014 1:11:54 PM
12/5/2014 2:05:50 PM
12/5/2014 3:17:18 PM
what if these cameras prove something we dont want provedhypothetical: black people are more often than not up to no goodDISCLAIMER: I DONT BELIEVE THIS TO BE TRUEim just making sure you guys know that as this data becomes available it might be used in ways you dont expect. imagine the headline on drudge for example:COP CAMS PROVE ALL WHITES INNOCENTetc.
12/5/2014 3:36:38 PM
What if they show a man getting choked to death, and the grand jury does nothing about it.
12/5/2014 5:08:59 PM
be careful !thats the kind of talk that some number cruncher will use in a cost benefit analysis to prevent these things from being implemented.
12/5/2014 6:05:50 PM
That's a massive systemic issue that a lot of us have been howling about for literally years now. Way before Ferguson, way before Eric Garner, way before the DC metro shooting, and so on.Prosecutors who rely heavily upon and have an entirely too close relationship with police officers should not be the ones presenting to the grand jury when there is a question of police misconduct or questionable use of force. They are incapable of being honest with the evidence because they NEED a friendly relationship with the police and cannot afford to have an adversarial relationship with them. That's why you need an independent branch who only deal with cops.It's not that grand juries love cops so much more than all of us (though the average american does have an unhealthy level of respect and deference towards authority), it's that they only get he information that the person seeking the indictment gives them. If they don't want an indictment returned they just don't truly pursue one and put on a sham showing to the grand jury.
12/5/2014 6:32:36 PM
what if these cams show y0willy0 sucking a giant fat veiny dickDISCLAIMER: I'M LITERALLY SAYING THAT THEY WOULD[Edited on December 5, 2014 at 7:44 PM. Reason : because statistics ]
12/5/2014 7:44:21 PM
Whenever your Tourette's acts up you should confine yourself to Chit Chat.I haven't provoked your stupid troll ass in a long time.
12/5/2014 8:42:36 PM
12/5/2014 10:35:22 PM
yay, more ways for big brother to keep track of you!
12/5/2014 10:55:03 PM
12/6/2014 1:09:20 AM
Whatever extrapolation I'm making with my hypothetical cop is not inherently sillier than going from the idea that a police force hypothetically could, with enormous resources and unlikely political backing, use body cameras for a vast data mining program that would passively scan for "signs of even the slightest shady thing...for days, even weeks after the fact."
12/6/2014 1:34:03 AM
I have a huge problem with Obama dumping money into this when part of the problem is police departments having too much money aready. They need to be using their own weapons budgets to pay or this. At the same time, Obama should be dumping money into communities, but rather further militerize police.
12/6/2014 1:41:38 AM
wait... you consider body cameras as militarization of the police?
12/6/2014 11:31:32 AM
^^ The thing is, I don't think there are many people who say "let's keep the police stuck in the past." It's more that people see that these new tools have serious privacy implications, and they want the government to have restrictions in place on their use. Not only that, but, as the Eric Garner case points out, if the police still won't be held accountable for their actions, then why give them new tools to use to continue trampling on our rights, along with a blank check to use them? It's basically the worst of both worlds.And my extrapolation to the massive data-mining isn't absurd, as the government is already doing it, albeit in the guise of protecting against terrorism. It's just a hop, skip, and a jump to applying it for other purposes. Moreover, when police departments learn they can supplement their county's budgets by mining this footage, you better believe they will do it. They already do it for local school districts in small towns by setting up absurd speed traps and enforcement regimes, and this is AFTER we passed laws to keep police departments from subsidizing their own budgets via such schemes.And I don't buy the red herring of "you gave Google this info, so why not the police?" 1) I may willingly give my info to Google or Apple or whoever, and maybe that's stupid, but I still willingly gave it. That's wholly different than having the government take the information without your permission and then mine it to see what you did wrong. 2) More importantly, Google isn't going to throw me in jail or try to find some crime I committed. They just want to make some more money off of me. Put a little differently, Google is a private entity, and it doesn't have the force of law (and law enforcement) behind it in order to utterly wreck the rest of my life and/or throw me in prison.Sure, we've abrogated our responsibility as citizens to reject government intrusions into our privacy, but that doesn't mean we should completely ignore new and obvious threats to it.
12/6/2014 2:16:37 PM
12/6/2014 2:57:38 PM
12/7/2014 1:42:17 AM