Does anybody remember the old Manhunter games from Sierra? They used a very similar idea of replaying a timeline multiple times to track a bunch of suspects as they interacted throughout an event. What was a clever but abstract sci-fi game mechanic has suddenly become reality.
The video was eye-opening for me to how sophisticated imagery and image tracking has become from my little explorations into neural nets, openCV and others.
One book I was recently browsing "Crime Analysis Systems: Using Computer Simulations and Geographic Information Systems" published in 2008, and this video, make me think the combination of predictive analytics and their toolset, along with surveillance will lead to large neural nets sifting through traffic, pedestrian and vehicular live and historical footage, trying to forecast a crime or public disturbance, and dispatch prophylactic police personnel.
Minority Report without the time-traveling mentats!
I am sure every police department would like this, if they don't already have it. PSS, Ross McNutt's company sells the tech to domestic and international buyers.
I will not even address the privacy concerns, since they are so ubiquitous and immediate in today's consciousness.
And even then, only in geosynchronous orbit, way too far away for photo surveillance. Spy satellites are in LEO and orbit the earth v roughly once an hour--they dont "hover" at all.
(In fact, they're passing over the ground at ~10km per second, so they end up using very fancy tracking optics to prevent motion blur. The best can apparently image lines in a parking lot. And to top off the technological insanity, some built during the Cold War did all this with ANALOG FILM, which was then dropped via a reentry capsule and caught in midair by a support plane while parachuting back to earth.)
Yes, it's far cheaper to fly planes in the atmosphere than launch satellites into space. And you only need one plane vs multiple satellites for persistence over a location.
It's an array of 10 or so cameras shooting at 1fps at high res. Quite a lot of data generated over a day :) For smaller areas tethered drones would be interesting. I guess the main limitation is that most crime is committed at night when visibility is low.
It wouldn't be super hard to DIY this btw - there are good open source stitching and tracking algos, and many cameras that can shoot at high res at 1fps
You could do serious damage with this. You could follow CEO's,government officials etc and detail everything they do and who they meet with. Nothing stopping that company from using the images they have stored to compile information on whoever they want in the area. Great technology thats super easy to abuse to devastating effect in a myriad of ways. No one really cares about that though .
Whats really scary, is that though right now this is fairly high tech and needs specialized hardware and software, that requirement won't always be there.
How many months until this is in the hands of any interested party with a bit of technical knowledge an the ability to read some documentation?
The rapid acceleration of technology is causing problems in many areas. Freedom means trusting each other, and I fear we (as a species) cannot adapt our social structures fast enough. We are falling behind because technology is being introduced to society faster than society can adapt.
Oddly enough it doesn't.
This was developed by DARPA with over the shelf technology the camera uses an array of several 1000s cellphone cameras and and the processing is done on commercial GPUs.
The sensory data looks like ARGUS, before this around 2008 the Israelis had a similar system called Sharp Anchor which had even greater resolution at 4cm per pixel in full color which was reportedly deployed over Gaza.
You could do a lot of that by many other means: Simple cell phone tracking will tell you everywhere people go and everyone they meet. Plenty of apps track geolocation; data on hosted servers and the wire have plenty more data, etc.
Nothing tells a story like high quality video though. Just imagine a story told via cell phone tracking of a CEO and known prostitutes phone traveling to a hotel together vs satellite/drone video feed (at a high quality the US government uses, not the grainy stuff they and this guy are releasing) .
Watch all the cops from the sky. Sell a stream of GPS coordinates to bad guys. Figure out where all the cops live. Figure out daily routes and make your rival late for a meeting. Learn armored car routes. Figure out which kids walked home from school alone with no parents home. Accumulate lists of people who take suspicious routes so if they're ever questioned as witnesses cops have leverage.
Hell, this very video alone indicates homes where a group of vigilantes, witch-hunters or competing drug dealers could go tonight to get revenge.
"HawkEye II is intended to see expansive areas wtih resolutions that allow users to detect movements of people and vehicles. It does not provide the ability to detect gender, ethnicity, age, hair color, nor can it be used for facial recognition. This is an inherent limit to Wide Area Motion Imagery. If cameras get better - and they will - the same rseolution limits will remain in place, the change will be in the size of the coverage area."
At least the company behind this seems to be ethical.
Conversely those better cameras with a narrower coverage area (ie the same one they have now) those better cameras might have the resolution required for detection of "gender, ethnicity, age, hair color ... facial recognition."
"Additionally, they discovered that when the suspect walked away from the shopping center, he’d passed in front of a ground-based security camera. Accessing that footage and reviewing Cooper’s mug shots on file, they found a possible match."
It's a small leap to combine panoptic surveillance with predictive policing (the latter has been used in large cities already) - along with automated classification labeling "suspect" behaviour.
Note for example that it is rather likely, if you go from an historic "know good" dataset containing more convictions of poor people of colour, that you would automate racial profiling... Quite possibly mixing cause and effect in the training period. Consider further the implications of a company running prisons (paid per inmate) going into the business of selling city/country-wide surveillance systems to "assist police".
This video confirms so many of my concerns about surveillance. The problem, of course, is that nothing i just watched received any sort of rigor. Despite knowing no identities, and confirming nothing about the vehicles in question, an entire narrative is presented without any shred of evidence. For all we know, this "drug deal" may well have been a carpet cleaner with inconvenient timing who can expect to have his house raided next week.
In fact, let me take that a step further. What evidence do i have that this was even a murder? I'll assume in this case it is, but can i independently confirm that? Of course not. Worse still is the logical skip: "well now that i have shown you this, here are some colorful lines demonstrating a ton of other related behavior that you should totally extrapolate nefarious connections from." The scope of narratives that can be taken out of context, or outright invented using these videos is terrifying.
They found a body with a bullet in it's head. That's step one.
Step two, they went to these recordings, looked where they found that body, and they tracked all the people who were there when the murder happened.
>an entire narrative is presented without any shred of evidence
Why should it? It's not trying to convince you a murder took place. That's already an established fact. It's trying to show you the technology.
Nothing here would have been able to predict a crime. Someone driving around the block twice before driving across town might just be a driver whose car is making a funny sound when he turns left, so he's investigating it. That means nothing. Unless you've got a bloody corpse laying in the alley he's driving past. Then it means a whole lot.
> They found a body with a bullet in it's head. That's step one.
i am not much of an expert, but for a start they would need the exact time of the murder - without this fact all these little dots that move around the screen don't make a lot of sense.
Until an AI monitoring the video dispatches the police to intercept you, because it's decided that behaviour like that is associated with subsequent criminal activity.
I'm sure the police have the time and resources to spend their days running all over town chasing down false positives and arresting people for driving in circles.
Part of the problem with this is that you are looking at a scene with additional knowledge which the people present may or may not also have had, and you're looking at it from a vastly different angle.
If these things makes it to court, expect a lot of challenges on the basis of those kind of things. If it's used merely as a starting point for "real police work" then that may be ok.
But consider e.g. the policy of extrajudicial assassinations of suspected drug dealers for money in the Philippines[1], where a system like this would potentially allow police officers to "justify" their decisions far faster (and there's a lot of people with money in that) by playing fast and easy with what "looks like" a drug deal.
Or consider that the US has a government that considers extrajudicial killings of terror suspects by drone acceptable. How long until systems like the above play into providing "evidence" into those kind of decisions - we already know they don't have a problem with rather substantial collateral damage.
This kind of technology does have a lot of potential for good. But it also has a lot of potential for supporting authoritarianism and for aiding state terror.
Context is important here. Before jumping to the obvious logical conclusion "Cameras in all the skies would prevent all the murders," remember how messed up a place like Juarez is: A murder happened in plain daylight. Home common would you suppose that is in other locales? And once it's known that cameras are in the sky, how many of the remaining murders would continue to take place outdoors?
This isn't preventing murders. They didn't even know a murder happened until after they found the body. Nobody was able to pick that up on the footage until after the fact.
With that said, if you're doing a drug deal and don't want to be murdered, why would you do it indoors? Also, to murder someone indoors, you need access to a building, which really tends to limit the number of viable suspects (if it's a private place) or produce a lot of witnesses (if it's a public place.) The murder happened in an alley because nobody is watching the alley. There aren't a lot of indoor spaces that aren't being watched by someone.
> With that said, if you're doing a drug deal and don't want to be murdered, why would you do it indoors?
Because you also don't want to get arrested, and the presence of tech like this means you have every reason to assume it won't be long before the moment any of the people present gets tied to drug activity, they will start to go through recordings and tag anyone he's been in contact with in circumstances that look like they might be a drug deal.
It's creating a situation where doing it outdoors does not just place you in jeopardy because of a specific deal, but potentially also because of any incidents tied to any deal any other people present have made or will make.
> or produce a lot of witnesses (if it's a public place.)
I find it bizarre that you assume an indoors location will inherently produce more witnesses than doing it outdoors.
Consider a parking garage. I've been to plenty in major cities where finding a location that is free of people for a little while would be easy even in the middle of the day.
Even so, even with witnesses, if the alternative is a few eye witnesses vs. an "all seeing" surveillance system in the sky that can track you for extended periods of time, it's not at all given that it wouldn't be preferably to be prepared to risk a few witnesses. Case in point:
> The murder happened in an alley because nobody is watching the alley.
The murder happened because they thought nobody is watching the alley. That doesn't mean there aren't plenty of other places suitable as well. So when that changes (the alley is being watched), the calculation as to which space is least risky changes too.
Today we can confidently guess that THIS is the secret groundbreaking military technology that "60 Minutes" was alluding to in 2008.
Reporter Bob Woodward (known for breaking much of the Watergate story that led to President Richard Nixon's resignation) claims that the US military has a new secret technique that's revolutionary. The following is what he said in his interview[1] with Scott Pelley on 60 Minutes in September 2008:
Woodward: This is very sensitive and very top secret, but there are secret operational capabilities that have been developed by the military to locate, target, and kill leaders [in Iraq].
Pelley: What is this? Some kind of surveillance, some kind of targeted way of taking out just the ... leadership?
Woodward: It is the stuff of which military novels are written.
Pelley: Do you mean to say that this special capability is such an advance in military technique and technology that it reminds you of the advent of the tank and the airplane?
Woodward: Yeah.
The bits of info from Woodward, the timeline of the development of military aerial camera systems (such as Angel Fire), the claimed capability to locate people -- it all fits. This is the revolutionary advance in military capability they are talking about.
Yea there is tagging of people, objects but that's software applied to high resolution images. Collecting those high resolution images is the real challenge here; seeing how pixels change from frame to frame once you have the imagery isn't (well, it used to be certainly but we've got better). You claim this is real-time... Are you sure this processing isn't applied after the fact?
for a kick, watch the bourne movies again. they seemed somewhat far-fetched when they first came out but now look rather conservative in what they portray the CIA as being able to do (presumably with help from NSA)
it's almost as if they modeled the real tools after the fictional ones...
I know how anti-surveillance HN is, but I would like to make a case this could be an amazingly good thing.
The cost of crime to society has been estimated to be on the order of $300 billion/year (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2835847/). But that doesn't include numerous indirect costs. E.g. decreased property values, white flight and the various issues it causes, people staying indoors or making sacrifices due to fear of crime, etc.
One of the biggest things is that bothers me about our society, is children are not allowed to go outside anymore. People blame electronics, but it's almost entirely due to parents that fear their kids being outside of their eyesight. Look at the incredible map on this article, on how much range children have lost over time: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-462091/How-children-... And it's almost entirely due to fear of child abductors and crime, although other issues like increased automobile traffic play a part. I find this incredibly sad.
A surveillance society could eliminate almost all crime, or at least serious crimes. Even just reducing them significantly would have enormous economic and social impact.
I too, find the idea of being watched constantly creepy. So I propose some restrictions. They should require a warrant to get the data from the surveillance machines, and only be allowed to use it for a particular case. It should be entirely air gapped. It should be deleted after a week. And it should ideally be stuff like this surveillance drone, which can't make out individual faces, just movements to see where people have gone.
We are looking at a society that is surrounded by sensors anyway. Surveillance cameras on businesses are becoming nearly universal now they are so cheap, and everyone walks around with a microphone in their pocket. Soon all cars will have insurance mandated dashcams, not to mention self driving cars loaded with sensors. All that stuff seems much creepier than a drone, as it can't make out the faces of individuals and what they are doing or saying.
I'd like to note that crime has deeper roots than opportunity. I think knowing who pulled the trigger does not fix the societal problems. This can be used in a good way, like you said, but I'm worried that stuff like this will give new hope to War on Drugs, premise of which is fundamentally flawed.
> A surveillance society could eliminate almost all crime, or at least serious crimes. Even just reducing them significantly would have enormous economic and social impact.
I wanted to be on your side, I really did, until I came to this paragraph.
From my point of view "crime" is an intrinsic part of our species, doing bad things is one of the things that make us humans. I'm not condoning rapes nor murders, it's just that, if you look at the history of our species, you'd realize that we are where we are (we've sent people to the Moon and discovered planets from galaxies far, far away) also because we did "bad" stuff.
Take the Bible, a book that has had a profound effect on the "Western" civilization. The story of Cain and Abel is one of the most important from the Old Testament. The New Testament is also a "Chronicle of a Crime Foretold", to paraphrase Garcia Marquez.
Or Homer's The Iliad, the book that defined the Greek-Roman antiquity. It's full of murders and rapes and bad things.
Long story short, we wouldn't have had the "enormous economic and social impact" that we have today as a species if, let's say, an omnipotent God/Spaghetti Flying Monster would have just watched us from the very beginning and would have prevented us from doing any crimes.
I hardly see the relevance of crime fiction as an argument against an efficient justice and crime prevention system, which is the argument you seem to be making. I'm also fairly sure actual rape and murder are not pre-requisites to writing crime fiction...otherwise the Law & Order series apparently has a much higher production cost then I imagined.
Seems a bit of a stretch from "crime happened in the past and people wrote about it in fiction" to "crime is fundamentally necessary for our societal development"...
Fiction represented what people saw around them and considered them as some sort of values.
Someone above mentioned "Law&Order" as some sort of dismissal, but that's exactly the point, in a "know it all surveillance society" the societal aspects that made the producers think: "hey, let's make a show about the good guys catching the bad guys, let's call it 'Law&Order'" would not be present. Fiction is always backed up by facts from the real life.
I should know, i grew up in a wannabe "know it all surveillance society" (on the Eastern side of the wall), where we did not have TV shows like 'Law&Order' because, technically, the "socialist society" we were part of didn't have any bad guys. There were of course criminals, and rapist, and bad people, but they were just a glitch hidden under the rug. It was sort of supposed that in the brighter future awaiting us all those "bad elements" would have been gone for good.
The former socialist government of my country was against the bad guys because in the end we were all supposed "to all be equal", some commenters on HN are against the bad guys because it brings down real estate prices, maybe some other people are against the bad guys because in a book of fiction 2000-years old someone wrote it down that: "You should not steal", the fact remains that no-one, ever, would be able to hide the "bad guys" under the rug, for ever. It's against our very nature as a species.
> A surveillance society could eliminate almost all crime, or at least serious crimes. Even just reducing them significantly would have enormous economic and social impact.
The problem with your assertion that once crime is reduced significantly children will be allowed to go play on the streets again does not match reality, as evidenced by this randomly googled graph[0].
Crime's been down for a long time, yet fear is way up.
This fear is easily but not correctly explained by direct factor such as crime or terrorism. So any reductions in crime or terrorism will not induce a reduction in fear, it will just shift so to something else.
Why all the fear though, I don't have a good answer to...
My theory about that is that once crime starts going down, people become even more "averse" to it. I.e. it ceases to become a day to day thing, and consequently people want to avoid it even more. Sort of the inverse of desensitizing.
Though, to be fair, I'd posit that it should balance out after a while. Once people start noticing that their fear is unwarranted, they'll start becoming more comfortable.
Humans have an innate need for stress & conflict. Crime has gone way down, to the point that most fears are unwarranted, yet people invent even more fears to be uncomfortable about.
Yes I've read 1984. It's a parody of socialism and totalitarianism. It has nothing to do with modern democracies, or drones. Its also entirely a work of fiction.
The author clearly worried about many of the same issues affecting his own democracy, and wrote about it too. It's not just a parody of totalitarianism if the author describes the same issues in democracy.
Totalitarianism is absolutely relevant for democracies, because many are only nominally democratic, many employ totalitarian practices and many turn into totalitarianism.
I think this is our future, whether it's dystopian or not.
Technology is eventually going to make it impossible to really prevent "Persistent aerial surveillance". What requires an expensive small blimp today might become the size of a ping pong ball (or wide area flock of them) and come out of a 3D printer tomorrow.
So who will be using such tech? Governments and private entities alike - we can try to legislate against either but technology will probably overpower the legislation quickly.
So what is the impact of this sort of technology? Maybe it's not all George Orwell. Your bike was stolen on Third St at 1pm? Roll the video back or forwards to know exactly where the thief is. Someone shot up a nightclub and rushed out in a crowd? automated video analysis caught them.
Yes it sounds scary if it were a monopolized power, but eventually I don't think government will be able to hold monopoly on it.
It seems all those paths are still drawn by humans, I think. It still takes a lot of watching those images and putting points on them before they could really start an investigation.
Of course if this agency has access to the cellphone towers, it could allow them to draw those points, but I don't know if towers are always triangulating the positions of all cellphones in an area at any given time.
There is a scene in Homeland where Saul is captured, in that video objects are "tagged" as combatants (triangles), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3MWxgfUWyA ... I find remote sensing technology like that to be entirely operational (domestic and foreign) at this point.
As we reach a point where the science fiction genre can be merged with fiction, I would just like to point out my appreciation for the many authors that spent the time to open the cans of worms and tell stories of their implications. This article makes me thinkof Daniel Suarez's Influx. And only a decade ago, I thought it was weird that Neal Stephenson's snow crash had an entire subclass of people delivering pizzas, but now with Uber eats and foodera, except that they deliver anything and everything.
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[ 5.2 ms ] story [ 146 ms ] threadOne book I was recently browsing "Crime Analysis Systems: Using Computer Simulations and Geographic Information Systems" published in 2008, and this video, make me think the combination of predictive analytics and their toolset, along with surveillance will lead to large neural nets sifting through traffic, pedestrian and vehicular live and historical footage, trying to forecast a crime or public disturbance, and dispatch prophylactic police personnel.
Minority Report without the time-traveling mentats!
I am sure every police department would like this, if they don't already have it. PSS, Ross McNutt's company sells the tech to domestic and international buyers.
I will not even address the privacy concerns, since they are so ubiquitous and immediate in today's consciousness.
http://www.radiolab.org/story/eye-sky/
(In fact, they're passing over the ground at ~10km per second, so they end up using very fancy tracking optics to prevent motion blur. The best can apparently image lines in a parking lot. And to top off the technological insanity, some built during the Cold War did all this with ANALOG FILM, which was then dropped via a reentry capsule and caught in midair by a support plane while parachuting back to earth.)
They fly a modified Cessna for hours on end and use a stitched imaging system to form a massive panoramic video, basically.
Highly recommend the read
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13BahrdkMU8
It's an array of 10 or so cameras shooting at 1fps at high res. Quite a lot of data generated over a day :) For smaller areas tethered drones would be interesting. I guess the main limitation is that most crime is committed at night when visibility is low.
It wouldn't be super hard to DIY this btw - there are good open source stitching and tracking algos, and many cameras that can shoot at high res at 1fps
http://www.pss-1.com/#!hawkeye-ii-resolution/ccm3
How many months until this is in the hands of any interested party with a bit of technical knowledge an the ability to read some documentation?
One of my older posts addresses the larger picture of this problem: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8916033
The sensory data looks like ARGUS, before this around 2008 the Israelis had a similar system called Sharp Anchor which had even greater resolution at 4cm per pixel in full color which was reportedly deployed over Gaza.
Hell, this very video alone indicates homes where a group of vigilantes, witch-hunters or competing drug dealers could go tonight to get revenge.
At least the company behind this seems to be ethical.
http://www.pss-1.com/#!hawkeye-ii-resolution/ccm3
"Secret Cameras Record Baltimore’s Every Move from Above (bloomberg.com)": https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12347595
"Additionally, they discovered that when the suspect walked away from the shopping center, he’d passed in front of a ground-based security camera. Accessing that footage and reviewing Cooper’s mug shots on file, they found a possible match."
Note for example that it is rather likely, if you go from an historic "know good" dataset containing more convictions of poor people of colour, that you would automate racial profiling... Quite possibly mixing cause and effect in the training period. Consider further the implications of a company running prisons (paid per inmate) going into the business of selling city/country-wide surveillance systems to "assist police".
In fact, let me take that a step further. What evidence do i have that this was even a murder? I'll assume in this case it is, but can i independently confirm that? Of course not. Worse still is the logical skip: "well now that i have shown you this, here are some colorful lines demonstrating a ton of other related behavior that you should totally extrapolate nefarious connections from." The scope of narratives that can be taken out of context, or outright invented using these videos is terrifying.
Power indeed.
Step two, they went to these recordings, looked where they found that body, and they tracked all the people who were there when the murder happened.
>an entire narrative is presented without any shred of evidence
Why should it? It's not trying to convince you a murder took place. That's already an established fact. It's trying to show you the technology.
Nothing here would have been able to predict a crime. Someone driving around the block twice before driving across town might just be a driver whose car is making a funny sound when he turns left, so he's investigating it. That means nothing. Unless you've got a bloody corpse laying in the alley he's driving past. Then it means a whole lot.
i am not much of an expert, but for a start they would need the exact time of the murder - without this fact all these little dots that move around the screen don't make a lot of sense.
Assuming he saw it.
Part of the problem with this is that you are looking at a scene with additional knowledge which the people present may or may not also have had, and you're looking at it from a vastly different angle.
If these things makes it to court, expect a lot of challenges on the basis of those kind of things. If it's used merely as a starting point for "real police work" then that may be ok.
But consider e.g. the policy of extrajudicial assassinations of suspected drug dealers for money in the Philippines[1], where a system like this would potentially allow police officers to "justify" their decisions far faster (and there's a lot of people with money in that) by playing fast and easy with what "looks like" a drug deal.
Or consider that the US has a government that considers extrajudicial killings of terror suspects by drone acceptable. How long until systems like the above play into providing "evidence" into those kind of decisions - we already know they don't have a problem with rather substantial collateral damage.
This kind of technology does have a lot of potential for good. But it also has a lot of potential for supporting authoritarianism and for aiding state terror.
[1] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-37172002
With that said, if you're doing a drug deal and don't want to be murdered, why would you do it indoors? Also, to murder someone indoors, you need access to a building, which really tends to limit the number of viable suspects (if it's a private place) or produce a lot of witnesses (if it's a public place.) The murder happened in an alley because nobody is watching the alley. There aren't a lot of indoor spaces that aren't being watched by someone.
Because you also don't want to get arrested, and the presence of tech like this means you have every reason to assume it won't be long before the moment any of the people present gets tied to drug activity, they will start to go through recordings and tag anyone he's been in contact with in circumstances that look like they might be a drug deal.
It's creating a situation where doing it outdoors does not just place you in jeopardy because of a specific deal, but potentially also because of any incidents tied to any deal any other people present have made or will make.
> or produce a lot of witnesses (if it's a public place.)
I find it bizarre that you assume an indoors location will inherently produce more witnesses than doing it outdoors.
Consider a parking garage. I've been to plenty in major cities where finding a location that is free of people for a little while would be easy even in the middle of the day.
Even so, even with witnesses, if the alternative is a few eye witnesses vs. an "all seeing" surveillance system in the sky that can track you for extended periods of time, it's not at all given that it wouldn't be preferably to be prepared to risk a few witnesses. Case in point:
> The murder happened in an alley because nobody is watching the alley.
The murder happened because they thought nobody is watching the alley. That doesn't mean there aren't plenty of other places suitable as well. So when that changes (the alley is being watched), the calculation as to which space is least risky changes too.
Reporter Bob Woodward (known for breaking much of the Watergate story that led to President Richard Nixon's resignation) claims that the US military has a new secret technique that's revolutionary. The following is what he said in his interview[1] with Scott Pelley on 60 Minutes in September 2008:
Woodward: This is very sensitive and very top secret, but there are secret operational capabilities that have been developed by the military to locate, target, and kill leaders [in Iraq].
Pelley: What is this? Some kind of surveillance, some kind of targeted way of taking out just the ... leadership?
Woodward: It is the stuff of which military novels are written.
Pelley: Do you mean to say that this special capability is such an advance in military technique and technology that it reminds you of the advent of the tank and the airplane?
Woodward: Yeah.
The bits of info from Woodward, the timeline of the development of military aerial camera systems (such as Angel Fire), the claimed capability to locate people -- it all fits. This is the revolutionary advance in military capability they are talking about.
[1] http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/09/04/60minutes/main4415...
it's almost as if they modeled the real tools after the fictional ones...
The cost of crime to society has been estimated to be on the order of $300 billion/year (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2835847/). But that doesn't include numerous indirect costs. E.g. decreased property values, white flight and the various issues it causes, people staying indoors or making sacrifices due to fear of crime, etc.
One of the biggest things is that bothers me about our society, is children are not allowed to go outside anymore. People blame electronics, but it's almost entirely due to parents that fear their kids being outside of their eyesight. Look at the incredible map on this article, on how much range children have lost over time: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-462091/How-children-... And it's almost entirely due to fear of child abductors and crime, although other issues like increased automobile traffic play a part. I find this incredibly sad.
A surveillance society could eliminate almost all crime, or at least serious crimes. Even just reducing them significantly would have enormous economic and social impact.
I too, find the idea of being watched constantly creepy. So I propose some restrictions. They should require a warrant to get the data from the surveillance machines, and only be allowed to use it for a particular case. It should be entirely air gapped. It should be deleted after a week. And it should ideally be stuff like this surveillance drone, which can't make out individual faces, just movements to see where people have gone.
We are looking at a society that is surrounded by sensors anyway. Surveillance cameras on businesses are becoming nearly universal now they are so cheap, and everyone walks around with a microphone in their pocket. Soon all cars will have insurance mandated dashcams, not to mention self driving cars loaded with sensors. All that stuff seems much creepier than a drone, as it can't make out the faces of individuals and what they are doing or saying.
I wanted to be on your side, I really did, until I came to this paragraph.
From my point of view "crime" is an intrinsic part of our species, doing bad things is one of the things that make us humans. I'm not condoning rapes nor murders, it's just that, if you look at the history of our species, you'd realize that we are where we are (we've sent people to the Moon and discovered planets from galaxies far, far away) also because we did "bad" stuff.
Take the Bible, a book that has had a profound effect on the "Western" civilization. The story of Cain and Abel is one of the most important from the Old Testament. The New Testament is also a "Chronicle of a Crime Foretold", to paraphrase Garcia Marquez.
Or Homer's The Iliad, the book that defined the Greek-Roman antiquity. It's full of murders and rapes and bad things.
Long story short, we wouldn't have had the "enormous economic and social impact" that we have today as a species if, let's say, an omnipotent God/Spaghetti Flying Monster would have just watched us from the very beginning and would have prevented us from doing any crimes.
Someone above mentioned "Law&Order" as some sort of dismissal, but that's exactly the point, in a "know it all surveillance society" the societal aspects that made the producers think: "hey, let's make a show about the good guys catching the bad guys, let's call it 'Law&Order'" would not be present. Fiction is always backed up by facts from the real life.
I should know, i grew up in a wannabe "know it all surveillance society" (on the Eastern side of the wall), where we did not have TV shows like 'Law&Order' because, technically, the "socialist society" we were part of didn't have any bad guys. There were of course criminals, and rapist, and bad people, but they were just a glitch hidden under the rug. It was sort of supposed that in the brighter future awaiting us all those "bad elements" would have been gone for good.
The former socialist government of my country was against the bad guys because in the end we were all supposed "to all be equal", some commenters on HN are against the bad guys because it brings down real estate prices, maybe some other people are against the bad guys because in a book of fiction 2000-years old someone wrote it down that: "You should not steal", the fact remains that no-one, ever, would be able to hide the "bad guys" under the rug, for ever. It's against our very nature as a species.
The problem with your assertion that once crime is reduced significantly children will be allowed to go play on the streets again does not match reality, as evidenced by this randomly googled graph[0].
Crime's been down for a long time, yet fear is way up.
This fear is easily but not correctly explained by direct factor such as crime or terrorism. So any reductions in crime or terrorism will not induce a reduction in fear, it will just shift so to something else.
Why all the fear though, I don't have a good answer to...
[0] http://www.statista.com/statistics/191219/reported-violent-c...
Though, to be fair, I'd posit that it should balance out after a while. Once people start noticing that their fear is unwarranted, they'll start becoming more comfortable.
Totalitarianism is absolutely relevant for democracies, because many are only nominally democratic, many employ totalitarian practices and many turn into totalitarianism.
Technology is eventually going to make it impossible to really prevent "Persistent aerial surveillance". What requires an expensive small blimp today might become the size of a ping pong ball (or wide area flock of them) and come out of a 3D printer tomorrow.
So who will be using such tech? Governments and private entities alike - we can try to legislate against either but technology will probably overpower the legislation quickly.
So what is the impact of this sort of technology? Maybe it's not all George Orwell. Your bike was stolen on Third St at 1pm? Roll the video back or forwards to know exactly where the thief is. Someone shot up a nightclub and rushed out in a crowd? automated video analysis caught them.
Yes it sounds scary if it were a monopolized power, but eventually I don't think government will be able to hold monopoly on it.
Of course if this agency has access to the cellphone towers, it could allow them to draw those points, but I don't know if towers are always triangulating the positions of all cellphones in an area at any given time.