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Homeland Security's Tech Wonders
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Sun Sep 23, 2007 11:49 AM
from the segways-and-calculator-watches dept.
from the segways-and-calculator-watches dept.
Lucas123 writes "The multi-billion dollar budget of the Department of Homeland Security has spawned a myriad of new, whiz-bang technology that includes things like keychain-size, remote-controlled aerial vehicles designed to collect and transmit data for military and homeland security uses. It also includes infrared cameras that capture license plate images to match them in milliseconds to police records. "Seventy percent of all criminal activity can be tied to a vehicle," says Mark Windover, president of Remington ELSAG Law Enforcement Systems, which is marketing its product to 250 U.S. police agencies."
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Thank God we have this technology (Score:5, Insightful)
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http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/news/index.cfm?newsid=10804 [pcadvisor.co.uk]
i know in my home town that police men on the beat has been completely stopped since the introduction of the blanket cctv coverage in my town but on Friday and Saturday nights shop windows in our high street get smashed and parked cars vandalised, and the drunken fights are now not stopped as no police attend, so who exactly is watching
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Yes. He was.
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You are joking aren't you, security cameras have this week been proved ineffective in solving and preventing crime!
With the greatest of respect, this study 1. does not "proove" anything - if you wanted to test the relationship between crimw clear-up rate and cctv then this is not the way you would do it, 2. studies in the beavhoural sciences typical 'falsify' 3. that study did not say anything about prevention. There's reference to a study completed in 2005 but this has been the topic of some contention in the world of criminology - some studies show one thing, another something completely different.
CCTV in the UK is
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Some of these things may actually cause a rise in crime. Since they are at least as useful to criminals as they are to law enforcement.
We need "CAPTCHA" license plates. (Score:4, Funny)
It also includes infrared cameras that capture license plate images to match them in milliseconds to police records.
The CAPTCHA's are getting so damned difficult to decipher that I can hardly even sign up for anonymous email accounts or download pr0n anymore.
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There. All captcha'd.
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But it'd be real hard to enforce in a rural state where everyone has dusty/muddy cars almost all the time, or in winter when you get snow splatter freezing on the lower half of the car, and can't drive two blocks without getting resplattered.
Another perverse thought: hairspray. Won't obscure it, but reduces contrast dramatically.
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But then, I doubt if any of this is about terrorism at all. I'm a lot more scared by a corporate-owned government using high technology to watch and control our behavior than I am of fundamentalist Muslims blowing me up. And I
bureaucratic incompetance is the greatest threat (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:bureaucratic incompetance is the greatest threa (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:bureaucratic incompetance is the greatest threa (Score:2, Insightful)
I like this sentence. It sends me into a trance every time I read it. I think it is because I imagine the DHS trying to perform this research and ironically getting nowhere. Then they try to research why their previous research got nowhere. When that gets nowhere they decide to research why the research of why their previous research got nowhere got nowhere and so on.
More than you understand. (Score:5, Insightful)
#1. More terrorists?
#2. More crooked cops?
Now, which of these is this new surveillance technology supposed to protect you from and which ones will have it?
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/conductunbecoming/ [nwsource.com]
Parent
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#1. More terrorists?
#2. More crooked cops?
Re:bureaucratic incompetance is the greatest threa (Score:2)
Data is not the same as intelligence (Score:5, Insightful)
Look up "incest". (Score:5, Interesting)
The companies making the products often hire politicians who voted to purchase those products to fight [crime|terrorism|kiddie_porn].
It's all an incestuous cycle.
Parent
70% bad vehicles (Score:5, Funny)
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Funny, Remington ELSAG didn't offer statistics on what percent of crimes can be tied to a gun...
Re:70% bad vehicles (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
Why use humans when you've technology (Score:4, Insightful)
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I believe Anthony Burgess pointed this out well in Clockwork Orange. You can use technology to make a man into an upright citizen, but it does not make him an upright citizen. It more or less destroys the nature of man.
hmmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:hmmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
People come up with nifty toys all the time. It's part of living in a high-tech society. The problem comes in when law-enforcement substitutes ineffective technological measures for quality police work.
Parent
Plate Capture technology (Score:4, Interesting)
I've seen the vehicle, it's a mini-van with cameras mounted at the top of both A pillars and pointing outward and a little above curb level. When they spot a vehicle the put on a boot with a keypad. To get the boot off you have to call the 800 number, pay on average $350 then remove the boot and return it to the police department.
The other little thing that went into effect were tons of new parking meters. The one thing right about that is the kiosk system, no individual meters. It prints a ticket that you place in your car. And it takes credit cards. The kiosk is also run via solar power and uses a MESH network connection.
So not all those technologies are used to spy per se, but as revenue generation tools.
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Might be cheaper to cut off the boot with an oxy-acet, and just eat the cost of one new wheel. "What boot?"
They just love their toys, don't they? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Perhaps you have noticed a trend during this time toward larger, heavier vehicles? Then there are all the electronic safety features available on modern cars like ABS, airbags, traction/stability control, tire pressure monitoring, lane departure warning, active roll bars, etc.
So please tell me, what is it about the larger, heavier vehicles that makes them safer? Is it the increased braking distance? Perhaps the slower handling? Maybe the fact that the taller ones tip over easier? Or maybe you are just referring to the extra protection provided by 2 more tons of steel wrapped around you - in that case you realize of course that the extra steel might afford you a bit of extra protection, but only at the expense of increased damage to the family in the Honda that you just hit?
Let'
Once we are all in chains (Score:3, Insightful)
Spy Tech? (Score:2)
One step solution (Score:2)
Problem - Solution:
Overbearing satellites - sombrero
Nanohelicopters - fly swatter
Towers, sensors and radar - pantomime horse outfit
Ranged finger and iris scans - sunglasses and gloves
One step solution: Pantomime horse wearing sunglasses, gloves and a sombrero carrying a fly swatter.
police (Score:2, Funny)
Re:not wrong (Score:4, Funny)
Well, and now we know why he believes he's above the law.
Parent
Re: "a myriad" eh? (Score:4, Informative)
http://m-w.com/dictionary/myriad [m-w.com] (Definition of myriad from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary)
A problem with information on 'the Internets' is that there are chances that the quality of the sources are not always properly assessed.
CC.
Parent
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Not knowing the relative authority of either source, the one about modern English trumps the one about ancient Greek in my book.
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myriad [reference.com]
-noun
1. a very great or indefinitely great number of persons or things.
2. ten thousand.
-adjective
3. of an indefinitely great number; innumerable: the myriad stars of a summer night.
4. having innumerable phases, aspects, variations, etc.: the myriad mind of Shakespeare.
5. ten thousand.
Origin: 1545-55; Gk myriad- (s. of myriás) ten thousand; see -ad1
Also interesting:
Usa
A very small myriad (Score:2)
"All this expensive crap has a myriad of uses compared to good old fashioned police work."
Thats "a great myriad" to you Pal (Score:2, Funny)
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I'm never going to bother to spellcheck a slashdot post an
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George Washington was considered a terrorist, was not involved in a political party, and in his farewell address warned us against taking side in political parties and never to let them control the bureaucracy.