Surveillance

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Re: Surveillance

Postby stefano » Fri Oct 03, 2014 7:21 am

Thanks for keeping this thread going, Miles.

elfismiles » Tue Sep 09, 2014 2:57 pm wrote:I wonder how many towns / cities have these systems?

NYC approves sensors to pinpoint gunfire


Cape Town is about to get one, I think it's out on tender at the moment after the tests last month.

New gunshot detection system takes aim at Cape gangsterism
South Africa
Saturday 13 September 2014 - 7:03pm

CAPE TOWN - The City of Cape Town is relying on world-class technology in the fight against gangsterism.

It's piloting a system, that can detect gunshots within half a metre from where they were fired.

The City says this technology could help in curbing unnecessary deaths.

Communities in some Cape Town suburbs live in fear and often in the crossfire as rival gangs take aim at each other.

Now, the City of Cape Town is testing state-of-the-art technology to try quell the recent surge in violence.

The ShotSpotter is being piloted in the gang hotspot of Hanover Park.

We're unable to show you what it looks like, or how it operates because it's installed in secret locations.

"Leave the bad guys guessing. But it allows us to triangulate the location of the gunshot to within half a metre. So we're having extraordinary success with that," said Mayoral Committee member JP Smith.

"We've got staff on standby in the area and the gangsters are trying to fool us by shooting off firecrackers all the time. We can tell the difference between a firecracker and a gunshot. The system is intelligent enough to do that."

Smith says quicker response times, will lead to more arrests.

"That has allowed us to recover two firearms in the area in this way and it also means that we've seen the gunshots come down now because the guys have the unnerving experience of having the police arrive very, very quickly after their gunshot, to the exact location," he continued.

"So, in the last week that we've been doing the response, we've seen it come down. We've been running this system for three weeks. Sadly, I must say, that is 241 gunshots in three weeks in Hanover Park."

The system will soon be rolled out to the SAPS war room.

If it's successful, authorities will look into setting it up in gang hotspots across the City.
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Re: Surveillance

Postby elfismiles » Fri Oct 03, 2014 8:29 am

Yer welcome! Thanks for the local update.

Here's wishing the Panopticon goes bankrupt sooner than later and we don't have to worry about this or worse anymore.

Cheers.

stefano » 03 Oct 2014 11:21 wrote:Thanks for keeping this thread going, Miles.

elfismiles » Tue Sep 09, 2014 2:57 pm wrote:I wonder how many towns / cities have these systems?

NYC approves sensors to pinpoint gunfire


Cape Town is about to get one, I think it's out on tender at the moment after the tests last month.
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Re: Surveillance

Postby elfismiles » Sun Oct 19, 2014 9:49 am

Can't decide on a thread to put this in so ... Seems like there are 1 or 2 other threads somewhere around here with the info on government programs that are monitoring social media / tracking the spread of jokes, memes, astroturfing, etc but I can't find them. I did find a "Fruh-thread" mentioning the same guy as in this article and a few others of possible relevance tho...

Fed-backed Twitter study draws fire
By Julian Hattem - 10/18/14 02:57 PM EDT

A Republican member of the Federal Communications Commission is warning about a government-backed study that “seems to have come straight out of a George Orwell novel.”

Commissioner Ajit Pai — one of two Republicans on the five-member commission — warned in a Washington Post op-ed on Saturday about a National Science Foundation study of people's communications on Twitter, which he said amounted to government monitoring of people’s speech.

“In the United States, the government has no business entering the marketplace of ideas to establish an arbiter of what is false, misleading or a political smear,” he wrote.

“The federal government has no business spending your hard-earned money on a project to monitor political speech on Twitter.”

The “Truthy” study, which is funded by the National Science Foundation, is being developed by Indiana University researchers to study how popular ideas and jokes spread throughout popular culture. One focus is the spread of “political smears, astroturfing, misinformation, and other social pollution,” researchers said.

“While the vast majority of memes arise in a perfectly organic manner, driven by the complex mechanisms of life on the Web, some are engineered by the shady machinery of high-profile congressional campaigns,” the university explained.

To Pai, the project sounds a lot like the FCC’s contentious plans to study the editorial practices of newsrooms, which many said could be a violation of the constitutional right to freedom of the press.

Pai was a major critic of that effort and his alarms helped to have it scrapped in February.

“The episode reaffirmed that the American people, not their government, determine what their critical information needs are and that the First Amendment means the government has no place in the newsroom,” he wrote in Saturday’s op-ed.

“That principle applies here.”

http://thehill.com/policy/technology/22 ... draws-fire



Slum Dog Obama in the news. Who is Ajit Varadaraj Pai?
Post by fruhmenschen » 02 Nov 2011 15:17
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=33474

Re: Modeling the Post Apocalypse
Post by wintler2 » 07 Mar 2013 07:36
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=36129

Surfing the SEAS Synth Environ Anal Sim
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=32452

Synthetic Environments for Analysis and Simulation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_ ... imulations

Synthetic Environments for Analysis and Simulation
http://www.cryptogon.com/?p=956
<snip>
The US government appears to be Simulex’s number one customer, however. And Chaturvedi has received millions of dollars in grants from the military and the National Science Foundation to develop SEAS.

http://www.theregister.com/2007/06/23/s ... print.html


... meanwhile ....

Facebook hits DEA for fake account (Video)
By Julian Hattem - 10/17/14 05:46 PM EDT
http://thehill.com/policy/technology/22 ... ke-account
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Re: Surveillance

Postby elfismiles » Thu Oct 23, 2014 3:26 pm

Interpol facial recognition experts meet to develop global guidelines
By Stephen Mayhew
October 22, 2014 -

Biometric experts recently gathered at the first meeting of the Interpol Facial Expert Working Group to begin development on international facial recognition standards, according to a report by Eurasia Review.

Held October 14-15, the meeting saw the participation of 24 technical and biometrics experts along with examiners from 16 nations, including identity and biometrics pioneer Dr Joseph Atick.

Over the course of the two days, these experts successfully created a ‘best practice guide’ for the quality, format and distribution of images to be used in facial recognition.

The guideline will be distributed to all 190 Interpol member countries to ultimately improve the quality of images required to achieve accurate and effective facial recognition.

Interpol is currently working with biometrics firm Safran Morpho to develop a facial image database, which is designed to improve Interpol’s forensic capabilities. The project is expected to become operational in early 2015.

Serving as Interpol’s advisory group in the field of biometrics, the working group will meet twice a year as part of the facial recognition initiative.

In 2015, Interpol will host its first facial recognition conference to promote facial recognition activities among member countries, as well as the sharing of facial images using the new database.


http://www.biometricupdate.com/201410/i ... guidelines

http://www.eurasiareview.com/20102014-i ... uidelines/
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Re: Surveillance

Postby elfismiles » Wed Jan 14, 2015 1:10 pm


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WqkmGG0biXc

This USB wall charger secretly logs keystrokes from Microsoft wireless keyboards nearby
January 12, 2015 10:55 PM
Emil Protalinski
http://venturebeat.com/2015/01/12/this- ... ds-nearby/
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Re: Surveillance

Postby elfismiles » Thu Jan 15, 2015 1:12 pm

The Free Encryption App That Wants to Replace Gmail, Dropbox, and HipChat
By Andy Greenberg / 01.14.15

Nadim Kobeissi. Photo: Quinn Norton/Wired
Image


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e01qNS4koTs
http://www.wired.com/2015/01/peerio-fre ... =social_fb
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Re: Surveillance

Postby elfismiles » Fri Jan 16, 2015 12:32 pm

Microsoft Proposes Using Kinect To Recognize Shoppers In Stores
Dave Smith
Jan. 12, 2015, 4:18 PM
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/microsof ... ail-2015-1
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Re: Surveillance

Postby coffin_dodger » Mon Feb 09, 2015 8:52 am

Not in front of the telly: Warning over 'listening' TV BBC News 9 Feb 2015

'Samsung is warning customers to avoid discussing personal information in front of their smart television set.'...

'The policy explains that the TV set will be listening to people in the same room to try to spot when commands are issued. It goes on to warn: "If your spoken words include personal or other sensitive information, that information will be among the data captured and transmitted to a third party."....

'The third-party handling the translation from speech to text has not been named.'....

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-31296188
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Re: Surveillance

Postby Elvis » Mon Feb 09, 2015 10:31 am

coffin_dodger » Mon Feb 09, 2015 5:52 am wrote:
Not in front of the telly: Warning over 'listening' TV BBC News 9 Feb 2015

'Samsung is warning customers to avoid discussing personal information in front of their smart television set.'...

'The policy explains that the TV set will be listening to people in the same room to try to spot when commands are issued. It goes on to warn: "If your spoken words include personal or other sensitive information, that information will be among the data captured and transmitted to a third party."....

'The third-party handling the translation from speech to text has not been named.'....

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-31296188



Wow.
“The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” ― Joan Robinson
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Re: Surveillance

Postby elfismiles » Thu Mar 12, 2015 1:26 pm

:mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2 :mad2

Mysterious spy cameras collecting data at post offices (VIDEO)
Posted 9:53 pm, March 11, 2015, by Chris Halsne, Updated at 10:04am, March 12, 2015

DENVER — Within an hour of FOX31 Denver discovering a hidden camera, which was positioned to capture and record the license plates and facial features of customers leaving a Golden Post Office, the device was ripped from the ground and disappeared.

FOX31 Denver investigative reporter Chris Halsne confirmed the hidden camera and recorder is owned and operated by the United State Postal Inspection Service, the law enforcement branch of the U.S. Postal Service.

The recording device appeared to be tripped by any vehicle leaving the property on Johnson Road, but the lens was not positioned to capture images of the front door, employee entrance, or loading dock areas of the post office.

An alert customer first noticed the data collection device, hidden inside a utilities box, around Thanksgiving 2014. It stayed in place, taking photos through the busy Christmas holidays and into mid-January.

Managers inside the post office tell FOX31 Denver they were unaware customers were being photographed outside and that the surveillance was not part of the building’s security monitoring.

A spokesperson for Postal Inspection Service declined to address the specific reason for the domestic surveillance, but admitted the agency had a “number of cameras at their disposal.”

Pamela Durkee, a Federal Law Enforcement Agent and U.S. Postal Inspector, sent an email to FOX31 Denver explaining, “(We) do not engage in routine or random surveillance. Cameras are deployed for law enforcement or security purposes, which may include the security of our facilities, the safety of our customers and employees, or for criminal investigations. Employees of the Postal Inspection Service are sworn to uphold the United States Constitution, including protecting the privacy of the American public.”

CHRIS HALSNEFOX31 Denver reviewed criminal search warrants on file in city, county, and federal court but none appeared to be related to the Golden post office camera set-up. The Postal Inspection Service would not confirm or deny that the camera was collecting data for a specific case or cases.

Lee Tien, an attorney for the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation, says more and more federal agencies are getting away with conducting surveillance and collecting personal data of citizens without a warrant signed by a judge.

“Part of being a responsible, constitutional government is explaining why it is doing surveillance on its citizens,” Lee told Halsne. “The government should not be collecting this kind of sensitive information. And it is sensitive! It`s about your relationships, your associations with other people, which can be friendship or political or religious. The idea that we give up that privacy simply because we use the U.S. mail is, I think, a silly idea.”

Lee says EFF has been fighting for greater government transparency when it comes to the way agencies like the FBI and the National Security Agency have been vacuuming up massive amounts of cell phone, email and license plates data and storing them in a central computer system.

Lee says, “The idea that they would be able to keep that information forever and search through it whenever they want to – that seems very, very wrong to us because it means you’ll be able to accumulate over time a lot of innocent peoples’ information and then use it in the kinds of ways that would not be overseen by any kind of court or independent third party.”

FOX31 Denver filed multiple Freedom of Information Act requests with the Postal Service, Postal Inspection Service, and Office of the Inspector General in an attempt to identify the cost and scope of the Postal Inspection Service surveillance program.

None of the agencies could provide a written data retention policy, which would detail how long USPIS could keep the images agents have been collecting from the Golden post office camera and other cameras around the Denver area. Similarly, there does not appear to be a policy regarding in what circumstances other federal agencies may have access to the personal information gathered from the cameras.

Our discovery of this camera program comes just months after the U.S. Postal Service was forced to reveal (during a Congressional hearing) that it was videotaping and storing the address and return information from billions of pieces of mail at its distribution centers.

A federal audit in 2014 found that the Post Office had “insufficient” controls in place when allowing law enforcement agencies access to the data collected from that “mail cover” program.

We did locate a California company which claims it sold the U.S. Postal Service “consumer surveillance systems,” which come installed with wireless data retrieval and infrared night capabilities.

Hop-On Incorporated did not return our repeated calls to elaborate on its self-proclaimed deal. Our FOIA requests for federal contracts and financial information about Hop-On and other contractors who sell USPS and USPIS camera equipment were returned to us void of all information.


http://kdvr.com/2015/03/11/mysterious-s ... t-offices/
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Re: Surveillance

Postby elfismiles » Tue Mar 24, 2015 2:58 pm

Amtrakl/DHS is spying on passengers and letting police access records without warrants
Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Do you feel secure knowing DHS/police are spying on passenger records without a warrant?

The first release of documents from 'Papers Please.org's' FOIA request for records of police and govt access to Amtrak reservation data show that Amtrak is giving police root access and a dedicated user interface to mine passenger data for general state and law enforcement purposes and is lying to passengers about it.


http://massprivatei.blogspot.com/2015/0 ... s-and.html

http://papersplease.org/wp/wp-content/u ... ar2015.pdf
http://papersplease.org/wp/wp-content/u ... ct2014.pdf
https://www.aclu.org/sites/default/file ... equest.pdf
https://www.aclu.org/sites/default/file ... uments.pdf
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Re: Surveillance

Postby identity » Fri Jun 19, 2015 3:03 am

Samuel Gibbs, the Guardian, Thursday 18 June 2015 11.53 BST

Google's new Nest Cam is always watching, if you let it into your home

Live-streaming video camera stores up to 30 days of video with audio in the cloud and performs advanced analysis of it. The Nest Cam can livestream video of your home straight to YouTube or be used as a security camera, letting Google into your home.

Google has released another product in its Nest Internet of Things lineup. This time it’s an internet-streaming home security camera, which means Google could be watching your every move, if you let it.

The Nest Cam, leaked a week before its official unveiling, is the product of another Google acquisition – Dropcam. The Nest Cam is essentially an improved Dropcam Pro, and is very similar to competitors from D-Link, Samsung and others. The differentiator for Google is Nest’s “Aware” system. The camera is small enough to be relatively inconspicuous – though not a spy camera by any stretch of the imagination – and is designed to be placed on a shelf, attached to the wall or a tripod. It connects to the internet via Wi-Fi and streams a wide-angle view of your room day or night, similar to competitors. But with Nest Aware, Google is also offering to record up to 30 days of video, with audio, to the cloud and do constant analysis of it.

Learning more about what’s happening in your home

A Nest support document states: “If you subscribe to Nest Aware with Video History, your Nest Cam will use advanced analysis to learn more about what’s happening.” The system is capable of ignoring everyday events such as car headlights flashing through the window, while looking out for the extraordinary. The camera looks for motion, for instance, and notifies the owner if it sees something, but it can also listen out for unusual sounds while ignoring background hum of the boiler. The owner can also view the camera’s feed through the Nest app on the iPhone or Android device, and the Cam integrates with Nest’s learning thermostat and smoke alarm.

The company is also pushing the Cam’s ability to stream video straight to Google’s YouTube, turning it into a live streaming “behind the scenes” camera. While some may find this feature useful for security and safety, others will raise privacy concerns and may consider constant surveillance sounds rather too much like a dystopian future.

Nest states that it respects user’s privacy, and that it does not sell or share user data. Nest also says that it is run separately to Google and that Nest accounts are not cross-linked with Google accounts. However, Nest admits that when connected to Google’s “Works with Nest integration” system, which allows other devices such as ceiling fans, washing machines and car sensors to integrate with Nest’s products, it does share personal information with Google. How much data, users can control.

As proved by the uproar over Samsung’s smart TVs that sent speech recorded from conversations in the living room unprotected over the internet, people do not like being listened in on. Nest states that it protects your privacy, won’t sell your data or use it to sell you ads, but bringing a camera into your living room, kitchen or kid’s bedroom is a whole other level of trust.
We should never forget Galileo being put before the Inquisition.
It would be even worse if we allowed scientific orthodoxy to become the Inquisition.

Richard Smith, Editor in Chief of the British Medical Journal 1991-2004,
in a published letter to Nature
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Re: Surveillance

Postby coffin_dodger » Fri Jun 19, 2015 4:52 am

^^ looks like we'll all be starring in our own 'Big Brother' type TV show. Can't wait to see how many viewers tune in to watch me take a dump. I have a very particular face I pull. Should be fun.
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Re: Surveillance

Postby coffin_dodger » Wed Aug 05, 2015 7:05 am

a little more 'normalisation' by The System via one of it's main mouthpieces, the BBC

Spyware demo shows how spooks hack mobile phones 05 Aug 2015

Intelligence agencies' secretive techniques for spying on mobile phones are seldom made public.

But a UK security firm has shown the BBC how one tool, sold around the world to spooks, actually works.

It allows spies to take secret pictures with a phone's camera and record conversations with the microphone, without the phone owner knowing.

Hacking Team's software was recently stolen from the company by hackers and published on the web.

Almost any data on a phone, tablet or PC can be accessed by the tool and it is fascinating how much it can do.

cont - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-33772261
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Re: Surveillance

Postby Joao » Fri Aug 07, 2015 2:11 pm

Old school...

Stasi Training Video: Clandestine Apartment Search
Training film produced in 1984 by the East German Ministry for State Security (Ministerium für Staatssicherheit, MfS, commonly known as the Stasi).

Some of the more salient quotes:
In January 1984, preliminary proceedings were introduced under the Operation "Auditor" in Division 2 against someone suspected of unlawful attempts at contacting the West.

This video documents the general procedure and stages of processing the case, as well as the prevention and circumvention of serious political damage to the GDR.

It was decided to clandestinely search Auditor's apartment to determine if he was producing writings, manuscripts or other materials and if they were meant to harm interests of the GDR.

It was obvious that it was occupied by a bachelor. Cleanliness and order left much to be desired.

It was of primary importance to secure written documents and conclusively prove that the contents were directed against social conditions in the GDR.

Random spot checks of Auditor's finished poems and novels yielded the insight that a majority of these scribblings were either covertly or openly leveled against the social conditions in the GDR.

Leads pointing to intelligence resources and/or espionage activity could not be acquired.

A large part of the handwritten or typed documents found--especially those that could contain prosecutable content--were duplicated in the kitchen with a Soviet copier.

The deliver of materials to the enemy was prevented, thereby protecting the interests of the GDR from harm.
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