Site icon IFSEC Insider | Security and Fire News and Resources

CCTV: Is It Really Spiralling out of Control?

1987 wasn’t a great year, to be frank, what with the Stock Market crash, and the King’s Cross London Underground fire. But on a positive note — The Simpsons made its TV debut.

In terms of what transpired in our security world, 1987 was pretty monumental. Why? We witnessed — no pun intended — the very first UK town centre CCTV system installed across King’s Lynn with a view towards protecting its 40-odd thousand citizens.

Proportionate surveillance
Since then, of course, CCTV’s presence in the public domain has burgeoned both in terms of the number of cameras involved and the quality of the technology that lies within them. Positively, specific systems operators are now licensed and regulated by the Government.

These regulated operators in unison with top quality cameras have given rise to myriad success stories of more and more criminals being brought to justice by way of all-seeing “eyes in the sky”.

Key to the ongoing success of CCTV has been, is, and always will be buy-in from the public — the people being watched.

As citizens, we all need to know that surveillance is both appropriate and proportionate in its deployment.

It must also be the case that camera system operators, and those who use the information duly captured, demonstrate integrity in doing so at all times

Speaking at IFSEC

Brian Sims has planned the seminar programme for IFSEC International 2013

When: 13th-16th May 2013

Find the very latest products and services in the CCTV & Video Surveillance product area.

Register for free access to IFSEC Academy education

CCTV Code of Practice
All of which is why the current UK coalition Government is committed to the further regulation of CCTV by way of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, and is presently seeking views on a draft Code of Practice focused on surveillance.

That Code is built squarely upon 12 guiding principles.

Interestingly, and for the first time, the notion of “surveillance by consent” is brought into play. There’s an obvious parallel here, then, with the ethics behind “policing by consent”.

The consultation period — which closes on 21 March — takes place while surveillance commissioner Andrew Rennison’s comment that HD CCTV could breach human rights remains fresh in the memory.

The commissioner has stated that the proliferation of HD surveillance systems — and facial recognition technologies — in public spaces could result in a backlash from citizens.

“The technology has overtaken our ability to regulate it,” said Rennison in The Independent. HD cameras are “popping up all over the place”, asserted the commissioner, with the exponential growth of high power megapixel cameras potentially becoming an issue around Article 8 of the Human Rights Act (relating to the protection of family and private life).

Proliferation of CCTV
Of course, discussions around “The Surveillance State” have surfaced time and again. They’re not likely to disappear. Indeed, across the years I’ve chaired numerous industry debates on this topic — all of them impassioned affairs.

At one of those debates I suggested that the proliferation of CCTV cameras in public spaces isn’t an issue if, like myself, you happen to be a law-abiding citizen and are behaving appropriately.

Some would assert that such a suggestion is perhaps a touch naive.

In all honesty, I would argue that neither the number of cameras monitoring us nor the inevitable advance of technology is the crux of the matter.

Rather, it’s what subsequently happens to the images, data, information — call it what you will — gathered as a result of that process that really matters.

The Protection of Freedoms Act is to be welcomed, as is the draft Code of Practice on surveillance.

Certainly, the balancing act that has to be struck for CCTV — between the need to enhance public space safety, and at the same time, safeguard privacies — is far from an easy task, but those two outcomes are not mutually exclusive.

Let’s never forget the vital information gathered by CCTV during 7/7 and the London riots of August 2011.

Properly regulated, deployed, and used CCTV is one of the very best crime-fighting tools at our disposal.

a euro ” Brian Sims is producing the seminar content for the CCTV & Video Surveillance product area at IFSEC International, sponsored by IDIS. To register for the show please visit www.ifsec.co.uk.

Free Download: The Video Surveillance Report 2023

Discover the latest developments in the rapidly-evolving video surveillance sector by downloading the 2023 Video Surveillance Report. Over 500 responses to our survey, which come from integrators to consultants and heads of security, inform our analysis of the latest trends including AI, the state of the video surveillance market, uptake of the cloud, and the wider economic and geopolitical events impacting the sector!

Download for FREE to discover top industry insight around the latest innovations in video surveillance systems.

Exit mobile version