Closed-circuit television
From Blogger, The Electrical
Engineering Solutions
"CCTV" redirects here. For
the Chinese television network, see China Central
Television. For the Irish television station,
see Cork Community TV.
Surveillance cameras on a corner.
Dome CCTV cameras
Closed-circuit television (CCTV) is the use of video cameras
to transmit a signal to a specific place, on a limited set of monitors. It
differs from broadcast television in that the signal is not openly transmitted, though it may
employ point to point (P2P), point to multipoint, or mesh wireless links.
Though almost all video cameras fit this definition, the term is most often
applied to those used for surveillance
in areas that may need monitoring such as banks, casinos, airports, military
installations, and convenience stores. Videotelephony
is seldom called "CCTV" but the use of video in distance education, where it is an important tool, is often so called.[1][2]
In industrial plants, CCTV equipment
may be used to observe parts of a process from a central control room, for
example when the environment is not suitable for humans. CCTV systems may
operate continuously or only as required to monitor a particular event. A more
advanced form of CCTV, utilizing digital video recorders[3]
(DVRs), provides recording for possibly many years, with a variety of quality
and performance options and extra features (such as motion-detection and email
alerts). More recently, decentralized IP-based CCTV cameras, some equipped with
megapixel sensors, support recording directly to network-attached
storage devices, or internal flash for
completely stand-alone operation. Surveillance
of the public using CCTV is particularly common in many areas around the world
including the United Kingdom, where there are reportedly more cameras per person than in
any other country in the world.[4]
There and elsewhere, its increasing use has triggered a debate about security
versus privacy.
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Uses
- 2.1 Crime prevention
- 2.2 Prevalence
- 2.3 Hacking and video art
- 2.4 Industrial processes
- 2.5 Traffic monitoring
- 2.6 Transport safety
- 2.7 Control of retail
- 2.8 Outside the United Kingdom
- 2.9 Criminal use
- 3 Privacy
- 4 Technological developments
- 4.1 Computer controlled analytics and identification
- 4.2 Retention, storage and preservation
- 4.3 Closed-circuit digital photography (CCDP)
- 4.4 IP cameras
- 4.5 Networking CCTV cameras
- 4.6 Integrated systems
- 4.7 Wireless security cameras
- 5 CCTV camera vandalism
- 6 Forensic Data Recovery of CCTV
- 7 See also
- 8 References
- 9 Further reading
- 10 External links
History
Closed circuit TV in Munich, 1973
photo
Sign warning that premises are
watched by CCTV cameras.
The first CCTV system was installed
by Siemens AG
at Test Stand VII in Peenemünde,
Germany in 1942, for observing the launch of V-2 rockets.[5]
The noted German engineer Walter Bruch
was responsible for the technological design and installation of the system.
In the U.S. the first commercial
closed-circuit television system became available in 1949, called Vericon. Very
little is known about Vericon except it was advertised as not requiring a
government permit.[6]
The earliest systems required
constant monitoring because there was no way to record and store the
information. Recording systems would be introduced later, when primitive
reel-to-reel media was used to preserve the data, where the magnetic tapes had
to be changed manually. It was a time consuming, expensive and unreliable
process; the operator had to manually thread the tape from the tape reel
through the recorder onto an empty take-up reel. Due to these efforts, video
surveillance was rare. Only when VCR technology became available in the 1970s, which made it
easy to record and erase information, did video surveillance start to become
much more common.[7]
CCTV recording systems are still
often used at modern launch sites to record the flight of the rockets, in order
to find the possible causes of malfunctions,[8][9]
while larger rockets are often fitted with CCTV allowing pictures of stage
separation to be transmitted back to earth by radio link.[10]
The history of CCTV in the United
States varies from that of the United Kingdom. One of its first appearances was
in 1973 in Times Square in New York City.[11]
The NYPD installed it in order to deter crime that was occurring in the area
however crime rates did not appear to drop much due to the cameras.[11]
Nevertheless, during the 1980s video surveillance began to spread across the
country specifically targeting public areas.[12]
It was seen as a cheaper way to deter crime compared to increasing the size of
the police departments.[11]
Some businesses as well, especially those that were prone to theft, began to
use video surveillance.[11]
During the 1990s digital multiplexing,
which allowed for several cameras at once to record, and introduced time lapse and motion only recording, increased the use of CCTV across
the country[12]
and increased the savings of time and money. From the mid-1990s on, police
departments across the country installed an increasing number of cameras in
various public spaces including housing projects, schools and public parks
departments.[11]
Following the September 11 attacks, the use of video surveillance has become a common
occurrence in the country to deter future terrorist attacks.[11]
In September 1968, Olean, New York
was the first city in the United States to install video cameras along its main
business street in an effort to fight crime.[13]
CCTV later became very common in
banks and stores to discourage theft, by recording evidence of criminal
activity. Their use further popularised the concept. The first place to use
CCTV in the United Kingdom was King's Lynn,
Norfolk.[14]
In recent decades, especially with
general crime fears growing in the 1990s and 2000s, public space use of
surveillance cameras has taken off, especially in some countries such as the United Kingdom.[citation
needed]
Uses
Crime
prevention
Experiments in the UK during the
1970s and 1980s (including outdoor CCTV in Bournemouth
in 1985), led to several larger trial programs later that decade.[14]
These were deemed successful in the
government report "CCTV: Looking Out For You", issued by the Home Office
in 1994, and paved the way for a massive increase in the number of CCTV systems
installed. Today, systems cover most town and city centres, and many stations,
car-parks and estates.
A more recent analysis by
Northeastern University and the University of Cambridge, "Public Area CCTV
and Crime Prevention: An Updated Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,"
examined 44 different studies that collectively surveyed areas from the United
Kingdom to U.S. cities such as Cincinnati and New York.
The analysis found that:
The analysis found that:
- Surveillance systems were most effective in parking lots, where their use resulted in a 51% decrease in crime;
- Public transportation areas saw a 23% decrease in crimes;
- Systems in public settings were the least effective, with just a 7% decrease in crimes overall. When sorted by country, however, systems in the United Kingdom accounted for the majority of the decrease; the drop in other areas was insignificant.[15]
The results from the above 2009
"Public Area CCTV and Crime Prevention: An Updated Systematic Review and
Meta-Analysis",[15][16]
are somewhat controversial.[17]
Earlier similar meta-analysis completed by Walsh and Farrington in 2002 showed
similar results: a significant decrease in car park crime
(41%), and a non-significant decrease of crime in public transit and public
places.[18]
This study was criticised for the inclusion of confounding variables (e.g. notification of CCTV cameras on site, improved street
lighting) found in the studies analyzed (including car park studies). These
factors could not be teased apart from the effect of CCTV cameras being present
or absent while crimes were being committed.[16][17]
Thus, a combination of factors might be important for the decrease in crime not
just the CCTV cameras. The 2009 study admitted to similar problems as well as
issues with the consistency of the percentage of area covered by CCTV cameras
within the tested sites (e.g. car parks have more cameras per square inch than
public transit).[16]
There is still much research to be done to determine the effectiveness of CCTV
cameras on crime prevention before any conclusions can be drawn.
There is strong anecdotal evidence
that CCTV aids in detection and conviction of offenders; indeed UK police
forces routinely seek CCTV recordings after crimes. Moreover CCTV has played a
crucial role in tracing the movements of suspects or victims and is widely
regarded by antiterrorist officers as a fundamental tool in tracking terrorist
suspects. Large-scale CCTV installations have played a key part of the defences
against terrorism since the 1970s. Cameras have also been installed on public transport
in the hope of deterring crime,[19][20]
and in mobile police surveillance vans, often with automatic
number plate recognition, and a
network of APNI-linked cameras is used to manage London's congestion charging
zone. Even so there is political hostility to surveillance and several
commentators downplay the evidence of CCTV's effectiveness, especially in the
US.[21]
However, most of these assertions are based on poor methodology or imperfect
comparisons.[22]
A more open question is whether most CCTV is cost-effective. While low-quality
domestic kits are cheap the professional installation and maintenance of high
definition CCTV is expensive.[23]
Gill and Spring did a cost-benefit analysis of CCTV in crime prevention that showed little monetary
saving with the installation of CCTV as most of the crimes prevented resulted
in little monetary loss.[17]
It was however noted that benefits of non-monetary value cannot be captured in
a traditional cost-benefit analysis and were omitted from their study.[17]
To get a full understanding of the costs and benefits of CCTV in crime
prevention these factors would have to be included. A 2008 Report by UK Police
Chiefs concluded that only 3% of crimes were solved by CCTV.[24]
In London, a Metropolitan Policereport showed that in 2008 only one crime was solved per
1000 cameras.[25]
In some cases CCTV cameras have become a target of attacks themselves.[26]
On July 22, 2005, Jean Charles de Menezes was shot dead by police at Stockwell tube station. According to brother Giovani Menezes, "The film
showed that Jean did not have suspicious behaviour" .[27]
Because of the bombing
attempts the previous day, some of
the tapes had been supposedly removed from CCTV cameras for study, and they
were not functional.[28]
An ongoing change to DVR-based technology may in future stop similar problems
occurring.[29]
In October 2009, an "Internet
Eyes" website was announced which would pay members of the public to view
CCTV camera images from their homes and report any crimes they witnessed. The
site aimed to add "more eyes" to cameras which might be
insufficiently monitored, but civil liberties campaigners criticized the idea
as "a distasteful and a worrying development".[30]
Prevalence
An article published in CCTV
Image magazine estimates that the number of cameras in the UK is 1.85
million. The number is based on extrapolating from a comprehensive survey of
public and private cameras within the Cheshire Constabulary jurisdiction.[31]
This works out as an average of one camera for every 32 people in the UK,
although the density of cameras varies greatly from place to place. The
Cheshire report also claims that the average person on a typical day would be
seen by 70 CCTV cameras.
The Cheshire figure is regarded as
more dependable than a previous study by Michael McCahill and Clive Norris of
UrbanEye published in 2002.[32]
Based on a small sample in Putney High Street, McCahill and Norris estimated the number of
surveillance cameras in private premises in London at around 500,000 and the
total number of cameras in the UK at around 4,200,000. According to their
estimate the UK has one camera for every 14 people. Although it has been
acknowledged for several years that the methodology behind this figure is
somewhat dubious,[33]
it has continued to be quoted in the absence of a better figure.
The CCTV User Group estimates that
there are around 1.5 million CCTV cameras in city centres, stations, airports,
major retail areas and so forth. This figure does not include the smaller
surveillance systems such as those that may be found in local corner shops[34]
and is therefore broadly in line with the Cheshire report.
Research conducted by the Scottish
Centre for Crime and Justice Research and based on a survey of all Scottish
local authorities, identified that there are over 2,200 public space CCTV
cameras in Scotland.[35]
Hacking
and video art
Hackers and guerrilla artists have
exposed the vulnerabilities of the video systems in an act dubbed "video
sniffing"[36][37]
They have crossed feeds, uploaded their own video feeds and used the video
footage for artistic purposes.
Industrial
processes
Industrial processes that take place
under conditions dangerous for humans are today often supervised by CCTV. These
are mainly processes in the chemical industry,
the interior of reactors or facilities for manufacture of nuclear fuel.
Special cameras for some of these purposes include line-scan cameras and thermographic cameras which allow operators to measure the temperature of the
processes. The usage of CCTV in such processes is sometimes required by law.[specify]
Traffic
monitoring
Main article: Traffic camera
Many cities and motorway networks
have extensive traffic-monitoring systems, using closed-circuit television to
detect congestion and notice accidents.[38]
Many of these cameras however, are owned by private companies and transmit data
to drivers' GPS systems.
The UK Highways Agency
has a publicly owned CCTV network of over 1,200 cameras covering the English
motorway and trunk road network. These cameras are primarily used to monitor
traffic conditions and are not used as speed cameras.
With the addition of fixed cameras for the Active
Traffic Management system, the number of cameras on
the Highways Agency's CCTV network is likely to increase significantly over the
next few years.[citation
needed]
The London
congestion charge is enforced by cameras positioned
at the boundaries of and inside the congestion charge zone, which automatically
read the licence plates of cars. If the driver does not pay the charge then a
fine will be imposed. Similar systems are being developed as a means of
locating cars reported stolen.[citation
needed]
Transport
safety
Digital Video Recorder for Public
Transport
A CCTV system may be installed where
an operator of a machine cannot directly observe people who may be injured by
some unexpected machine operation. For example, on a subway train, CCTV cameras
may allow the operator to confirm that people are clear of doors before closing
them and starting the train.[citation
needed]
Operators of an amusement park ride
may use a CCTV system to observe that people are not endangered by starting the
ride. A CCTV camera and dashboard monitor can make reversing a vehicle safer,
if it allows the driver to observe objects or people not otherwise visible.[citation
needed]
Control
of retail
Some software integrates with CCTV
to monitor the actions of workers in retail environments. Every action is
recorded as an information block with subtitles that explain the performed
operation. This helps to track the actions of workers, especially when they are
making critical financial transactions, such as correcting or cancelling of a
sale, withdrawing money or altering personal information.[citation
needed]
- Scanning of goods, selection of goods, introduction of price and quantity;
- Input and output of operators in the system when entering passwords;
- Deleting operations and modifying existing documents;
- Implementation of certain operations, such as financial statements or operations with cash;
- Moving goods, revaluation scrapping and counting;
- Control in the kitchen of fast food restaurants;
- Change of settings, reports and other official functions.
Each of these operations is
transmitted with a description, allowing detailed monitoring of all actions of
the operator. Some systems allow the user to search for a specific event by
time of occurrence and text description, and perform statistical evaluation of
operator behaviour. This allows the software to predict deviations from the
standard workflow and record only anomalous behaviour.[citation
needed]
Outside
the United Kingdom
A surveillance camera, aimed at a
public street (Kungsgatan) in Stockholm, Sweden. The camera is mounted on top
of the pole.
The use of CCTV in the United States
is less common, though increasing, and generally meets stronger opposition. In
1998, 3,000 CCTV systems were in use in New York City.[39]
There are more than 10,000 CCTV systems in Chicago.[40]
In the last few years particularly,
the percentage of people in the U.S. having installed a security-camera system
has increased dramatically. Global Security Solutions with the help of Zone
Tech Systems first announced the launch of IP surveillance in the U.S. security
industry by partnering up with Axis Communications (an IP pioneer). Today's
CCTV market has transformed the shift towards IP-based security products and
systems.[citation
needed]
In Latin America, the CCTV market is
growing rapidly with the increase of property crime.[41]
Surveillance camera mounted on the
walls of Rosenbad, one of the Swedish's government buildings in central
Stockholm, which houses the Prime Minister's office. One of the parliament's
(Riksdagen) building can be seen in the background.
Criminal
use
Criminals may use surveillance
cameras to monitor the public. For example, a hidden camera at an ATM can capture people's PINs as they are entered, without their knowledge. The devices
are small enough not to be noticed, and are placed where they can monitor the
keypad of the machine as people enter their PINs. Images may be transmitted
wirelessly to the criminal.[42]
Privacy
A mobile closed-circuit TV van
monitoring a street market
Opponents of CCTV point out the loss
of privacy of the
people under surveillance, and the negative impact of surveillance on civil liberties.
Furthermore, they argue that CCTV displaces crime, rather than reducing it.
Critics often dub CCTV as "Big Brother surveillance", a reference to George Orwell's
novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, which featured a two-way telescreen
in every home through which The Party would monitor the populace. Civil
liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch
have published several research papers into CCTV systems. In December 2009,
they released a report documenting council controlled CCTV cameras.[43]
Proponents of CCTV cameras have
argued that the cameras are not intruding into people's privacy, as they are not
surveilling private, but public space, where an individual's right to privacy
can reasonably be weighed against the intended benefits of surveillance.[44]
However, both the United States Supreme Court in Katz v.
United States and anti-surveillance activists
have held that there is a right to privacy in public areas.[45][46]
Furthermore, while it is true that there may be scenarios wherein a citizen's
right to public privacy can be both reasonably and justifiably compromised,
some scholars have argued that such situations are so rare as to not
sufficiently warrant the frequent compromising of public privacy rights that
occurs in regions with widespread CCTV surveillance. For example, in her book Setting
the Watch: Privacy and the Ethics of CCTV Surveillance, Beatrice von
Silva-Tarouca Larsen argues that CCTV surveillance is ethically permissible
only in "certain restrictively defined situations", such as when a
specific location has a "comprehensively documented and significant
criminal threat" (p. 160). Her central reasoning is that widespread
CCTV surveillance violates citizens' rights to privacy and anonymity within the
public sphere by jeopardizing both their liberty and dignity. She concludes
that CCTV surveillance should therefore be reserved for specific circumstances
in which there are clear and reasonably demonstrated benefits to its
implementation and few ethical compromises.[47]
Questions are also raised about
illegal access to CCTV recordings. The Data
Protection Act 1998 in the United Kingdom
led to legal restrictions on the uses of CCTV recordings, and also mandated
their registration with the Data Protection Agency. In 2004, the successor to
the Data Protection Agency, the Information
Commissioner's Office clarified that this required
registration of all CCTV systems with the Commissioner, and prompt deletion of
archived recordings. However, subsequent case law (Durant vs. FSA) has limited
the scope of the protection provided by this law, and not all CCTV systems are
currently regulated.[48]
Private sector personnel in the UK who operate or monitor CCTV devices or
systems are now considered security guards
and have been made subject to state
licensing.
A 2007 report by the UK's Information
Commissioner's Office, highlighted the need for the
public to be made more aware of the "creeping encroachment" into
their civil liberties created by the growing use of surveillance apparatus. A
year prior to the report Richard Thomas, the Information Commissioner, warned that Britain was
"sleepwalking into a surveillance society".[citation
needed]
In 2007, the UK watchdog CameraWatch
claimed that the majority of CCTV cameras in the UK are operated illegally or
are in breach of privacy guidelines.[citation
needed] In response, the Information Commissioner's Office denied
the claim adding that any reported abuses of the Data Protection Act are
swiftly investigated.[49]
In Canada, the use of video surveillance has grown very rapidly. In Ontario, both the
municipal and provincial versions of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act[50]
outline very specific guidelines that control how images and information
can be gathered by this method and or released.
Technological
developments
Surveillance camera at London
Heathrow Airport with a wiper for clear images during rain
Computer
controlled analytics and identification
Today’s High-definition CCTV cameras
have many computer controlled technologies that allow them to identify, track,
and categorize objects in their field of view.[citation
needed]
Video
Content Analysis (VCA) is the capability of
automatically analyzing video to detect and determine temporal events not based on a
single image. As such,
it can be seen as the automated equivalent of the biological visual cortex.
A system using VCA can recognize
changes in the environment and even identify and compare objects in the
database using size, speed, and sometimes colour. The camera’s actions can be
programmed based on what it is “seeing”. For example; an alarm can be issued if
an object has moved in a certain area, or if a painting is missing from a wall,
or if a smoke or fire is detected, or if running people are detected, or if
fallen people are detected and if someone has spray painted the lens, as well
as video loss, lens cover, defocuss and other so called camera tampering
events.[citation
needed]
VCA analytics can also be used to
detect unusual patterns in a videos environment. The system can be set to
detect anomalies in a crowd of people, for instance a person moving in the
opposite direction in airports where passengers are only supposed to walk in
one direction out of a plane or in a subway where people are not supposed to
exit through the entrances.[51]
VCA also has the ability to track
people on a map by calculating their position from the images. It is then
possible to link many cameras and track a person through an entire building or
area. This can allow a person to be followed without having to analyze many
hours of film. Currently the cameras have difficulty identifying individuals
from video alone, but if connected to a key-card system, identities can be
established and displayed as a tag over their heads on the video.[citation
needed]
There is also a significant
difference in where the VCA technology is placed, either the data is being
processed within the cameras (on the edge) or by a centralized server. Both
technologies have their pros and cons.[52]
Facial
recognition system Is a
computer application for automatically identifying or verifying a person from a
digital image or a video frame from a video source. One of the ways to do this
is by comparing selected facial features from the image and a facial database.[citation
needed]
The combination of CCTV and facial
recognition has been tried as a form of mass surveillance,
but has been ineffective because of the low discriminating power of facial
recognition technology and the
very high number of false
positives generated. This type of system has
been proposed to compare faces at airports and seaports with those of suspected
terrorists or other undesirable entrants.[citation
needed]
Eye-in-the-sky surveillance dome
camera watching from a high steel pole
Computerized monitoring of CCTV images
is under development, so that a human CCTV operator does not have to endlessly
look at all the screens, allowing an operator to observe many more CCTV
cameras.[citation
needed] These systems do not observe people directly. Instead, they
track their behavior by looking for particular types of body-movement behavior,
or particular types of clothing or baggage.
To many, the development of CCTV in
public areas, linked to computer databases of people's pictures and identity,
presents a serious breach of civil liberties.
Critics fear the possibility that one would not be able to meet anonymously in
a public place or drive and walk anonymously around a city.[53]
Demonstrations or assemblies in public places could be affected as the state
would be able to collate lists of those leading them, taking part, or even just
talking with protesters in the street.
Retention,
storage and preservation
Most CCTV systems record and store
digital video and images to a Digital Video Recorder or in the case of IP cameras
directly to a server, either on-site or offsite.[citation
needed]
The amount of data stored and the
retention period of the video or pictures are subject to compression ratios,
images stored per second, image size and duration of image retention before
being overwritten.[54]
Recordings are usually kept for a
preset amount of time and then automatically archived, overwritten or deleted.
Videos are kept in order to allow retrieval and review in the event a crime was
committed or the information needs to be studied for any number of reasons.[citation
needed]
Closed-circuit
digital photography (CCDP)
See also: Closed-circuit
television camera
Closed-circuit digital photography
(CCDP) is more suited for capturing and saving recorded high-resolution
photographs, whereas closed-circuit television (CCTV) is more suitable for
live-monitoring purposes.[citation
needed]
However, an important feature of
some CCTV systems is the ability to take high resolution images of the camera
scene, e.g. on a time lapse or motion-detection basis. Images taken with a
digital still camera often have higher resolution than those taken with some
video cameras. Increasingly, low-cost high-resolution digital still cameras can
also be used for CCTV purposes.[citation
needed]
IP
cameras
Main article: IP camera
Easy Connect Wireless IP camera
A growing branch in CCTV is internet
protocol cameras (IP cameras). IP cameras
use the Internet Protocol (IP) used by most Local Area Networks (LANs) to transmit video across data networks in digital
form. IP can optionally be transmitted across the public internet, allowing
users to view their cameras through any internet connection available through a
computer or a 3G phone. For professional or public
infrastructure security applications, IP video is restricted to within a
private network or VPN,[55]
or can be recorded onto a remote server.
Networking
CCTV cameras
The city of Chicago operates
a networked video surveillance system which combines CCTV video feeds of
government agencies with those of the private sector, installed in city buses,
businesses, public schools, subway stations, housing projects etc. Even home
owners are able to contribute footage. It is estimated to incorporate the video
feeds of a total of 15,000 cameras.[citation
needed]
The system is used by Chicago's Office
of Emergency Management in case
of an emergency call: it detects the caller's location and instantly displays
the real-time video feed of the nearest security camera to the operator, not
requiring any user intervention. While the system is far too vast to allow
complete real-time monitoring, it stores the video data for later usage in
order to provide possible evidence in criminal cases.[56]
London also has
a network of CCTV systems that allows multiple authorities to view and control
CCTV cameras in real time. The system allows authorities including the Metropolitan
Police Service, Transport for London and a number of London boroughs to share
CCTV images between them. It uses a network protocol called Television
Network Protocol to allow access to many more
cameras than each individual system owner could afford to run and maintain.[citation
needed]
The Glynn County Police Department
uses a wireless mesh-networked system of portable battery-powered tripods for
live megapixel video surveillance and central monitoring of tactical police
situations. The systems can be used either on a stand-alone basis with secure
communications to nearby police laptops, or within a larger mesh system with
multiple tripods feeding video back to the command vehicle via wireless, and to
police headquarters via 3G.[citation
needed]
Integrated
systems
An integrated systems unit.
Integrated systems allow users to
connect remotely from the internet and view what their cameras are viewing
remotely, similar to that of IP cameras.
In one incident in 2009, a lady from Boynton Beach, Florida was able to watch
her house get robbed and contacted police directly from her office at work.[57]
Wireless
security cameras
Main article: Wireless
security camera
Many consumers are turning to wireless
security cameras for home surveillance.[citation
needed] Wireless cameras do not require a video cable for
video/audio transmission, simply a cable for power. Wireless cameras are also
easy and inexpensive to install.[citation
needed] Previous generations of wireless security cameras relied on
analog technology; modern wireless cameras use digital technology which
delivers crisper audio, sharper video, and a secure and interference-free
signal.[citation
needed]
CCTV
camera vandalism
Unless physically protected, CCTV
cameras have been found to be vulnerable against a variety of (mostly illegal)
tactics[citation
needed]:
- Some people will deliberately destroy cameras. Some cameras can come with dust-tight, pressurized, explosion proof, and bullet-resistant housings.
- Spraying substances over the lens can make the image too blurry to be read.
- Lasers can blind or damage them. However, since most lasers are monochromatic, color filters can reduce the effect of laser pointers. However, filters will also impair image quality and overall light sensitivity of cameras (see laser safety article for details on issues with filters). Also, complete protection from infrared, red, green, blue and UV lasers would require use of completely black filters[citation needed], rendering the camera useless.
Forensic
Data Recovery of CCTV
A digital video recorder (DVR) of
closed-circuit television (CCTV) commonly has an in-built capability to export video
files to an optical storage media such as digital versatile disc. In the event
that the DVR is damaged, its contents cannot be easily exported. Hence, it is
generally accepted that recovering video files with its timestamps from a DVR
hard disk using proprietary file format in a forensically sound manner is an
expensive and challenging exercise.[citation
needed]
See
also
- Bugging
- Closed-circuit television camera
- Documentary practice
- Eye in the sky (camera)
- Fake security camera
- Information Awareness Office
- IP camera
- Physical security
- Privacy International
- Proprietary DVR
- Security Operations Center
- Security smoke
- Sousveillance (inverse surveillance)
- Surveillance
- Telescreen
- The Convention on Modern Liberty
- TV Network Protocol
- Under vehicle inspection
- Video analytics
- Videotelephony
- Washington County Closed-Circuit Educational Television Project
References
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pg. 572]
14. ^ ab
Staff (August 2007). "CCTV".
Borough Council of King's Lynn & West Norfolk. Retrieved 2008-12-14.
15. ^ ab"Public Area CCTV and Crime Prevention: An Updated
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis".
Journalist's Resource.org.
16. ^ abc
Walsh B.C.,Farrington D.P. (2009). "Public area CCTV and crime prevention: An updated
systematic review and meta-analysis".
Justice Quarterly26 (4): 716–745. doi:10.1080/07418820802506206.
18. ^ Walsh
B.C.,Farrington D.P. (2009). "Effects
of closed-circuit television on crime".
The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science587
(1): 110–135. doi:10.1177/0002716202250802.
21. ^ Baram, Marcus
(2007-07-09). "Eye on the City: Do Cameras Reduce Crime?". ABC News. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
25. ^ Hughe,
Mark (25 August 2009). "CCTV in the spotlight: one crime solved for every
1,000 cameras". Independent News and Media
Limited. Retrieved 2009-08-27.
31. ^"Only 1.85 million cameras in UK, claims ACPO lead on
CCTV - SecurityNewsDesk.com".
SecurityNewsDesk.com. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
35. ^ Bannister,
J., Mackenzie, S. and Norris, P. Public Space CCTV in Scotland(2009), Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research (Research
Report)
44. ^Smile, the
cameras are here to watch over you
- The New
Zealand Herald, Tuesday 18 March 2008, Page A14
46. ^http://www.annarbor.com/community/news/opinion/city_council_should_pass_the_freedom_from_surveillance_ordinance. Missing or empty |title= (help)
47. ^ Von
Silva-Tarouca Larsen, B. (2011). Setting the watch: Privacy and the ethics
of CCTV surveillance. Oxford: Hart Publishing.
53. ^ Todd
Lewan (July 7, 2007). "Microchips in humans spark privacy debate". USAToday. Retrieved 2012-06-07.
54. ^"H.264 compression versus MPEG4 compression for cctv
video storage". Retrieved 2011-03-28.[unreliable
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55. ^"Some IP Cameras Can Be Remotely Monitored With An
iPhone And Other Compatible 3G Devices"
(PDF). Retrieved 2009-07-22.
57. ^ Kim Segal
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Further
reading
- Armstrong, Gary, ed. (1999). The maximum surveillance society: the rise of CCTV. Berg (originally, University of Michigan Press). ISBN 9781859732212.
- Fyfe, Nicholas & Bannister, Jon (2005). "City Watching: Closed-Circuit Television in Public Spaces". In Fyfe, Nicholas & Kenny, Judith T. The Urban Geography Reader. Psychology Press. ISBN 9780415307017.
- Newburn, Tim & Hayman, Stephanie (2001). Policing, Surveillance and Social Control: CCTV and police monitoring of suspects. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781843924692.
- Norris, Clive (2003). "From Personal to Digital: CCTV, the panopticon, and the technological mediation of suspicion and social control". In Lyon, David. Surveillance as Social Sorting: Privacy, Risk, and Digital Discrimination. Psychology Press. ISBN 9780415278737.
External
links
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Wikimedia Commons has media
related to: Security
cameras
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- Space Shuttle External Tank and Solid Rocket Booster Camera Systems
- UK Government pro-CCTV campaign
- Assessing the Impact of CCTV, a UK Home office study on the effectiveness of closed-circuit television
- The Register story: Face recognition useless for crowd surveillance
- CCTV Guidance notes from the UK Information Commissioner's Office
- CBC Digital Archives - The Long Lens of the Law
- The Urbaneye Project on CCTV in Europe
- CCTV:Constant Cameras Track Violators National Institute of Justice Journal 249 (2003). Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice.
- Public Space CCTV in Scotland: Results of a National Survey of Scotland's Local Authorities
- Opinion on Video Surveillance in Public Places by Public Authorities and the Protection of Human Rights and Opinion on Video Surveillance by Private Operators in the Public and Private Spheres and by Public Authorities in the Private Sphere and the Protection of Human Rights, Venice Commission, 2007
- Applications of computer vision
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