Spy games

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

Topics

Security

ANALYSIS

Central London has at least 500,000 CCTV cameras and on a typical day an individual can expect to have their image captured 300 times. But what if those cameras remembered exactly where you'd been that day, or during the past weeks or months? And what if it weren't just the streets that were being watched, but your office too?

Questions of whether such surveillance is an infringement on privacy or simply benign protection aside, the reality is such systems are already emerging. Some vendors are pushing to make corporate physical security systems as pervasive and as easy to operate as Google. 3VR is one of the companies that believes in the benign power of surveillance and specialises in video analytic software that can, among other things, remember individual faces and pull up any video they've appeared in. "This will be of interest to anyone who wants to stop bad things from happening," says Tim Ross, the company's co-founder.

While critics say the spread of this kind of technology could be part of a Big Brother nightmare, Ross says it will actually be better for individual privacy in the long run. He argues that if the authorities can pinpoint exactly the video they need, they'll end up spending less time watching the rest of what goes on. "The trend towards more camera coverage is somewhat inevitable — in a post 9/11 world, there's too much need or demand for that," says Ross. "We think search is the key to privacy, not something that infringes."

Booming market
Corporate interest in physical security systems goes back, inevitably, to the terrorist attacks of 11 September, 2001. "9/11 increased the emphasis on all forms of risk management related to the potential for hostile human activity — both cyberdefence and physical defence," says Jay Heiser, research vice-president with analyst group Gartner.

As well as paying more attention to things like off-site backup systems, companies have started investing in ways of better locking down who can do what on their premises. The two main ways of doing this are video surveillance and access-control systems like key cards, which can be tied into IT authentication systems and feature biometric identification technology.

If 9/11made companies start to think they should be investing in systems like those seen on the TV series 24, five years on a host of start-ups have sprung up to take advantage of that demand. "The turning point was 9/11. It drove a lot of interest in homeland security, a lot of government spending and increased spending from large, Fortune 500 corporations," says 3VR's Ross.

On a basic level, companies have started digitising their video surveillance systems, which today are overwhelmingly analogue. That trend was in evidence when Cisco's acquired digital migration tools maker SyPixx. "Video is a good way to use up network bandwidth, and anything that does that fills Cisco's pockets, so why wouldn't they at least dabble in it?" says Gartner's Heiser.

Cameras that remember you
3VR has been drawing attention in recent months, partly because a successful funding round in January included investment from In-Q-Tel, a CIA-funded private venture firm. 3VR says it is also the first company of its kind to gain momentum in the mainstream business world, with customers including large companies like Morgan Stanley, GlaxoSmithKline, Lehman Bros and several large hotel chains.

3VR's system is designed to cut through the hours of undifferentiated video typically generated by surveillance systems and pick out the most relevant bits. At the heart of is the search engine, which Ross compares to Google, which indexes all the video as it is recorded, extracting all the data it can — including things like particular types of motion and face recognition — and putting it into a searchable database. The data is then used to trigger alerts around defined conditions, so that a feed will be brought to attention on the monitor when certain types of activity are detected. It also makes vast video archives easily searchable, Ross says.

One of the key data types is face recognition. Every time the system encounters what it thinks is a new face, it assigns an ID tag to the face, which it continues...

For more, click here...

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

pjc158

So when is Amazon buying Waterstones?

2 hours ago by pjc158 on Waterstones to sell Kindles with in-store offers
J.A. Watson

@JoshArg - Well, I am writing this from my N150 Plus, running Ubuntu 12.04 and using a Bluetooth mouse (well, to be totally correct it is a...

2 hours ago by J.A. Watson on Samsung N150 Plus Netbook - Ubuntu Netbook Edition 10.04
J.A. Watson

@duncanjmurray - At least n the case of the specific system I put the SSD into, it is not the case. The boot time improvement is substantial, but...

2 hours ago by J.A. Watson on Netbook Upgrade - SSD IN, Windows OUT
archerthom

Sounds like only those who have bought their Kindle from Waterstones will be able to use them in-store - very disappointing. I have no intention...

4 hours ago by archerthom on Waterstones to sell Kindles with in-store offers
AndyPagin

From my mainframe operating days... 1) Play hoopla with write permit rings & a can of screen cleaner. 2) Make enormous paper chains (Christmas...

4 hours ago by AndyPagin on Ten IT jobs to save up for those rare lulls
61253

An OS X perspective Filenames beginning with a dot/period (.) should not be equated with HFS Plus resource forks; misunderstandings around ._ (dot...

5 hours ago by 61253 on SharePoint deployment: Pitfalls of a pioneer
ians1

There are many legal download sites for music at least that do not charge an arm and a leg like itunes or Napster. The "real" cost of an mp3 file...

6 hours ago by ians1 on The Pirate Bay infringes copyright, High Court decides
Jon Howells

@Crupal.. How does refusing your websites cookies help my privacy? A quick look at your page script reveals four sets of code provided by 3rd...

13 hours ago by Jon Howells via Facebook on Privacy watchdog to chase big companies over cookie law
Paul Carloss

There are hundreds, if not thousands of filesharing torrent sites, The Pirate Bay (TPB) is only one of them, while the TPB is blocked many more...

14 hours ago by Paul Carloss via Facebook on The Pirate Bay infringes copyright, High Court decides
Rebin Simpson

So could users DownGrade if the new OS didn't worked correctly ?

16 hours ago by Rebin Simpson on Sony delivers on Xperia Ice Cream Sandwich promise
duncanjmurray

Hmmm, I thought that with SSDs you could get to the mythical ubuntu 10 sec boot time? Is this not the case?

16 hours ago by duncanjmurray on Netbook Upgrade - SSD IN, Windows OUT
JoshArg

Thanks once again! I have installed Linux Mint 13 (Maya) everything runs well but.. bluetooh is not present, "there is no blueetooth adapter" do...

17 hours ago by JoshArg on Samsung N150 Plus Netbook - Ubuntu Netbook Edition 10.04
zdnetukuser

@JAW-- There’s a better-than-even chance that, had you made another choice of SSD, you would have noticed no improvement in battery life...

1 day ago by zdnetukuser on Netbook Upgrade - SSD IN, Windows OUT
Amb Rose

Please stop connecting the 'ATeam' to the UK Anonymous collective. Anonymous and the ATeam are not connected. The ATeam are not part of, affiliated...

2 days ago by Amb Rose via Facebook on UK Anonymous keeps up DDoS barrage on ICO
cpupal

Hi All I have looked into the cookie law today, there are a few solutions that these websites can use. Just add the widget and update your policy...

2 days ago by cpupal on Privacy watchdog to chase big companies over cookie law
dropz42

I read that many of the governments own websites are not yet compliant...shouldn't they sort that out before chasing others - slightly hypocritical !

2 days ago by dropz42 on Privacy watchdog to chase big companies over cookie law
Charles McLellan

@larrylisser Thanks for the feedback; you're quite right to surmise that the article's main point was to inform about developments in cloud-based...

2 days ago by Charles McLellan on VideoMeet: cloud-based video communication
J.A. Watson

@zdnetukuser - Thanks for pointing this out. I must admit that the relative power consumption of different manufacturers and models was something...

2 days ago by J.A. Watson on Netbook Upgrade - SSD IN, Windows OUT
J.A. Watson

@stevoparsons - You are absolutely right, I do expect a new system that is being connected to the Internet for the first time to pick up updates....

2 days ago by J.A. Watson on Windows Update Never Stops Sucking
zdnetukuser

@JAW-- Ya done good, boy. After two years of sifting and filtering data, it seems that the two lowest-power-consumption SSDs on the market are...

2 days ago by zdnetukuser on Netbook Upgrade - SSD IN, Windows OUT