My position is that if a population is caused to avoid exercising a right, then that right effectively ceases to exist. If Democrat rallies were regularly (and legally) shadowed by Republicans with AR-15s, and those rallies dried up voluntarily because of it, then I would consider the actions of those Republicans as having effectively damaged Freedom of Assembly.Darth Wong wrote:Surveillance is not a loss of liberty. You are just as free to do things after cameras as you were before. What do you think "liberty" means, exactly?Winston Blake wrote:5. Public acceptance, welcome and popularity do not imply liberty. People will accept a loss of liberty in exchange for security. Consider that if an Outer Party member opposed the presence of telescreens, it would obviously have been an extremely unpopular proposal.
You might argue that privacy is an absolute right, even in public (even though that doesn't really make sense), but the idea that public surveillance reduces your "liberty" seems completely unjustified. Unless, of course, you just mean that "liberty" = "good" and "public surveillance" = "bad".
No-one says the word 'bomb' while waiting in line at the airport - voluntarily. While this has a clear and limited scope, the advanced technologies being proposed make it possible to automatically flag people as 'suspicious' or 'possibly militant', merely for discussing a war movie with a friend in public. IIRC your son was considered a potential terrorist (on a no-fly list), and this caused delays and hassles (I don't remember the details). What if he had mumbled 'Bam!' such that an automated system recognised it as 'Bomb', and linked this with the no-fly list? This is a bit facetious, but many people know all too well that airport security isn't paid to think - they're paid to follow 'standard procedure'.
People will voluntarily limit their own rights to avoid hassles, and IF the scope and capability of CCTV expands enough, then I consider it to effectively damage those rights.The fact that people dislike it does not substantiate the claim that it removes peoples' "liberty". Those are still separate propositions. Why do people insist on turning everything into a "freedom" issue? It's like this magic word, and if you can attach it to your pet cause, then you win.
Since you're implicitly not an asshole, are you saying that your behaviour would be unchanged if you spotted a stranger keeping a camcorder over you and your family in public? A business owner may be 'watching for suspicious persons', while recording everything you say and do - that wouldn't affect your choice of speech or actions?Darth Wong wrote:Yeah, because they're assholes and they don't want their assholery caught on film. It doesn't mean they have lost their "liberty". AFAIK, the only time amateur video of private individuals becomes news is when they're caught doing something terrible.Starglider wrote:Recording makes a big difference, to a lot of people. Being in public inherently means being seen by other people, so very few people are bothered by simple watching. However if you take out a video camera and film random people with it, a sizable fraction will demand to know what you're doing.Darth Wong wrote:You might argue that privacy is an absolute right, even in public (even though that doesn't really make sense), but the idea that public surveillance reduces your "liberty" seems completely unjustified.
I don't see the relevance of 'getting on the news' or 'notoriety'. That's not the problem. I'd be more concerned about quiet annotations in a government database labeling innocent people as 'suspects', with conversation fragments and details of acquaintances and routines quietly built up over time. You can say 'Sufficiently large numbers of well-trained personnel could unflag people', but that means admitting that such people are treated as guilty until proven innocent.
And you see no qualitative difference between holiday snaps and large-scale, automated person tracking and conversation recording?open_sketchbook wrote:Seconded. Privacy means "license to be a douche" to a lot of people, who hate the idea that their mistakes might be on public record. The fact of the matter is, private citizens record untold amounts of information every day. I take pictures when I go on vacation, and you'd be an absolute douchecock to demand I delete a photo because I captured somebodies face on it.
1. 'Rumours' are utterly irrelevant. 2. The entire point of reviewing camera footage is that it allows noticing details that people might not. 3. Apparently you didn't read the part of the OP article talking about future capabilities.This is not to say there should be no such thing as privacy. People shouldn't have the interior of their house monitored. People shouldn't be allowed to take pictures up a women's skirt without asking. But when you step outside your own home, privacy, beyond aforementioned invasions of the upskirt nature, becomes rather irrelevant. The only difference between being seen by a bum on the street and a CCTV camera is quality of the memory; the difference between a bum spotting a robbery and the camera doing so is that the camera is going to give more reliable information and be more useful as evidence in court. In fact, the camera isn't going to spread rumours or notice things people might; honestly, the electronics are much more benign then most people are.
Out of curiosity: imagine that over the next few months, a number of important, high-profile crimes involving children were solved due to CCTV. The cameras just happened to catch a glimpse through windows of private houses/businesses - a blurry 2 second clip of a child waving for help, for example. A wave of public opinion supports cameras positioned to see through windows in 'troublesome areas'. What would your response be?