blog.wired.com — A strain of new software may have the potential to change the cameras that record everyone that walks past by blurring or encrypting faces in the footage, until there's an alarm or an investigation. This video show the software in action.
Jun 2, 2008 View in Crawl 4
spthomJun 3, 2008
This does nothing to effect privacy, really. IMO it would be more about making surveillance easier... If everything's muted until some facial recognition picked up a suspect or until some particular act (shoplifting?) were committed, it would make it easier to stare at a dozen monitors and make sense of what you're seeing.Hmm... If it makes "spying" more efficient, then this might actually be even worse for privacy concerns, wouldn't it?
pyro789xJun 3, 2008
Because cameras record the present, not the past. Recordings are meant to show you the past, not the present.
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