A Camera in Every Pot
Let’s look at the Washington Post. New York, Chicago, Miami and Seattle have instituted the controversial “One Camera Per Household” program. It makes all cameras on the city streets viewable by any citizen over a city’s WiMAX network. The intention is to extend the concept of Neighborhood Watch to the entire city, and thereby reduce burdens on law enforcement while neighbors become more self-policing. In this story, the Seattle system was getting plagued with hijacked broadcasts that appeared to be normal video images but, in fact, images were altered by video software like iMovie from Apple. The mayor and Bill Gates were quoted as saying that the Macintosh computer is a public safety hazard and should be eradicated from city limits.
What’s this world coming to? I laid back and closed my eyes and wished for a simpler world. Huh? Wuh? I awoke with a start to the sound of Ludacris’ War With God. Just my cell phone. Whoa. I must have been dreaming the whole time. The Estonia crisis is over. The Pentagon was not mobilizing. Security guards weren’t in every office and cameras weren’t on every corner. Phew!
Suddenly I felt grateful that the world is only as screwed up as it is, and not worse. Security directors are involved in office politics, yes, but the best of them use the politics for their own success. Compliance to regulations is a challenge, but one that can be met with proper uses of technologies and processes available today. And video surveillance is a growing business with loads of benefits for businesses and municipalities, as long as we take reasonable measures to secure the systems.
For those of you, like me, who dream of a better future for the security industry and its practitioners, frightening dreams sometimes cross our minds. But by collecting and discussing best practices, and keeping the vendors on their toes, we can create a future that affords us a little more time to tend the flowers.