A new kind of CCTV camera that promises less invasive surveillance is being
trialled in the US.
Developed by computer scientists at the University of California, Berkeley,
the CCTV camera can obscure a person's face with an oval spot.
The so-called 'respectful camera' is designed for use in day-to-day
surveillance and the oval spots can be removed by authorities in the event of an
investigation.
The UK currently leads the world in the use of CCTV cameras, according to
stats
from
the Information Commissioner's Office. There are currently 4.2 million
surveillance cameras dotted around the country, a ratio of one camera for every
14 people.
The respectful camera works with a special marker vest, worn by test
subjects. Tested on a building site, the camera identified workers wearing the
markers 93 per cent of the time, and blocked their faces.
In environments with more controlled lighting, that detection figure rose to
96 per cent. The developers picture the vest becoming little more than a
button-sized tag in the future that people could easily wear.
"Cameras are here to stay, and there's no avoiding it," UC Berkeley computer
scientist Ken Goldberg
told
the MIT Technology Review. "Let's figure out new technology to
make them less invasive."
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