Security cameras raise rights worry in NY: report|US News|Reuters.com
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The security cameras are watching, a New York rights group warned on Wednesday.
Security cameras have increased fivefold in parts of New York City and have become so pervasive that they threaten the rights of privacy, speech and association, the New York Civil Liberties Union, or NYCLU, said in a report.
Moreover, there was no evidence the cameras deterred crime, the group said.
In 2005 there were 4,176 cameras in three districts of southern Manhattan, up from 769 cameras in a 1998 survey, the report said.
"Unregulated video surveillance technology has already led to abuses in New York City, including the police department's creation of visual dossiers on people engaged in lawful street demonstrations and the voyeuristic videotaping of individuals' private and intimate conduct," the group said.
Police did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A 1998 study conducted by the NYCLU found 2,397 video surveillance cameras visible from street level in Manhattan. The report said that same number of cameras can be now found in the neighborhoods of Greenwich Village and Soho alone.
The thing I find interesting is that cameras have not been shown to lower crime rates. So here we're trading our privacy and getting nothing in return.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The security cameras are watching, a New York rights group warned on Wednesday.
Security cameras have increased fivefold in parts of New York City and have become so pervasive that they threaten the rights of privacy, speech and association, the New York Civil Liberties Union, or NYCLU, said in a report.
Moreover, there was no evidence the cameras deterred crime, the group said.
In 2005 there were 4,176 cameras in three districts of southern Manhattan, up from 769 cameras in a 1998 survey, the report said.
"Unregulated video surveillance technology has already led to abuses in New York City, including the police department's creation of visual dossiers on people engaged in lawful street demonstrations and the voyeuristic videotaping of individuals' private and intimate conduct," the group said.
Police did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A 1998 study conducted by the NYCLU found 2,397 video surveillance cameras visible from street level in Manhattan. The report said that same number of cameras can be now found in the neighborhoods of Greenwich Village and Soho alone.
The thing I find interesting is that cameras have not been shown to lower crime rates. So here we're trading our privacy and getting nothing in return.
Comments