Monday, March 12, 2007

Britain Uses Cameras to Track Every Car - Everywhere

Via Independent Online (Dec 2005) -

Britain is to become the first country in the world where the movements of all vehicles on the roads are recorded. A new national surveillance system will hold the records for at least two years.

Using a network of cameras that can automatically read every passing number plate, the plan is to build a huge database of vehicle movements so that the police and security services can analyse any journey a driver has made over several years.

The network will incorporate thousands of existing CCTV cameras which are being converted to read number plates automatically night and day to provide 24/7 coverage of all motorways and main roads, as well as towns, cities, ports and petrol-station forecourts.

By next March a central database installed alongside the Police National Computer in Hendon, north London, will store the details of 35 million number-plate "reads" per day. These will include time, date and precise location, with camera sites monitored by global positioning satellites.

Already there are plans to extend the database by increasing the storage period to five years and by linking thousands of additional cameras so that details of up to 100 million number plates can be fed each day into the central databank.

Senior police officers have described the surveillance network as possibly the biggest advance in the technology of crime detection and prevention since the introduction of DNA fingerprinting.

But others concerned about civil liberties will be worried that the movements of millions of law-abiding people will soon be routinely recorded and kept on a central computer database for years.

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Anyone remember that Lord Acton quote I posted the other day?

Don't worry the US isn't too far behind...back in 2003, Onstar sued the FBI for listening inside cars. Not because they were listening, because it disabled the Onstar system.

Therefore, if the FBI can find a way to do it without disabling the system...it will be legal. Of course, this was 4 years ago...I am sure they have discovered a way by now.

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