Security Software Surveillance
Security Software Surveillance: Our Right to Privacy is Threatened as Surveillance Cameras Are Installed Everywhere.
Security software surveillance is becoming more and more common and is being used everywhere to keep an eye on everything we do.
As the technology for video surveillance becomes even more advanced, the options for using surveillance will become even more expansive than they are right now, and it is already far more advanced than you probably know.
All you need to do is leave your home and you’ll find a video camera installed somewhere near you.
Cameras can been found in stores, parking lots, at ATM machines, at traffic lights, and hanging from the sides of buildings, and software makes almost every camera accessible to government agencies.
As cameras become smaller and more sophisticated it will be impossible for you to determine where they are.
Security software surveillance has very few laws and regulations when it comes to using it as well as the legalities of who should be allowed to view the tapes and images.
The tapes and photographs from surveillance cameras belong to those who did the recording and this can lead to potential abuse if these tapes are stolen or even sold without permission, not to mention the constant tracking of every citizen, the ultimate pal in the global elite designs for a New World Order.
Abuse of Surveillance
The more discrete and complicated video surveillance becomes the more chance there is of this technology to be abused, and when you combine video surveillance with facial recognition software and these systems will be able to identify someone just by comparing the image to the database that holds their driver’s license as it searches automatically across the globe.
Security software surveillance may be an aid to law enforcement but for the rest of society it is just another way for government agencies to find out more about you and to track you wherever you go.
As technology becomes more sophisticated anyone who wants to use surveillance to watch someone in a private place such as a locker room, changing room, or bathroom will be able to do so, and although this is an illegal act, the sophistication of this technology makes it likely that the person will never be caught.
These types of abuses of surveillance are a certainty.
Violation of the Fourth Amendment
There are many people, including government officials, who believe that the use of security software surveillance is a violation of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.
In the past courts have ruled in favor of the use of video surveillance when it is used in a way that any one physically there would have been able to freely view the subject being recorded.
Some courts and lawyers will say that any time someone is in a public location they no longer have the right to expect privacy.
This means that using surveillance cameras to watch someone in a public place is not considered to be an invasion of privacy or a violation of the Fourth Amendment.
But some government agencies are placed above the court system.
Informing People of Surveillance
The one regulation that is supposed to be adhered to when it comes to security software surveillance in public areas such as a business is that the public must be informed that surveillance is taking place.
However, informing people that they are being taped in a public park poses problems.
Legally the public needs to know that they are in an area that is under surveillance.
But if they don’t see the posted sign stating this, they have no idea that they are being watched.
By now, with surveillance in public places becoming more and more common, most people just assume that they are being watched anytime they aren’t in their own homes.
The government has already conditioned the American public to accept surveillance as part of their every day lives.
When they decide to keep track of movements by using Radio Frequency Identification tags, no one will be surprised nor will they protest about being watch so carefully.
By the time most people understand what is really happening it will be too late to turn back.
By then the government will have securely and permanently installed surveillance cameras and other tracking devices all across the country, giving them the ability to keep an eye on any one at any time, anywhere.