San Francisco Police Can Now Watch Private Surveillance Cameras in Real Time
upstart writes:
San Francisco police can now watch private surveillance cameras in real time:
Police in San Francisco got a boost to their surveillance powers this week after the city's board of supervisors voted on Tuesday to grant the police department access to private surveillance cameras in real time.
The vote, which passed 7-4, approved a one-year pilot program that will allow police to monitor footage from private cameras across the city with the camera owners' consent. The San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) will not have continuous access to the cameras but will be able to tap into the network under certain conditions, such as during the investigation of crimes including misdemeanors and property crimes. The SFPD will also be able to access private camera footage during large-scale public events such as protests, even if there is no suspicion that a crime has taken place.
"This ordinance essentially gives the SFPD the ability to put the entire city under live surveillance indefinitely"
Civil liberties groups such as the EFF and ACLU were strongly critical of the new measure, which they argue will increase the surveillance of already marginalized groups within the city. In a blog post, EFF policy analyst Matthew Guariglia wrote that the wide range of crimes that could trigger camera activation would allow blanket surveillance at almost any time.
"Make no mistake, misdemeanors like vandalism or jaywalking happen on nearly every street of San Francisco on any given day-meaning that this ordinance essentially gives the SFPD the ability to put the entire city under live surveillance indefinitely," Guariglia wrote.
However, San Francisco Mayor London Breed heralded the new legislation as a necessary measure for increasing public safety in the city, which has struggled with rising crime rates.
Read more of this story at SoylentNews.