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Poking the camera's eye: total surveillance awareness. (Citings).


WHO WATCHES THE watchmen?

One possible answer: We all should. This answer animates World Sousveillance Day December 24 has been designated as World Sousveillance Day. The choice for this day stems from the historical meaning of the celebration of Jesus Christ's birthday, and the reality of the census order by Herod.  (WSD WSD Word Sense Disambiguation (computational linguistics)
WSD Web Services on Devices (Information Technology)
WSD Water Supplies Department (Hong Kong) 
), which took place on December 24. (Sousveillance is a neologism A new word or new meaning for an existing word. The high-tech field routinely creates neologisms, especially new meanings. Years ago, there was no doubt that a "mouse" referred only to a furry, little rodent.  meaning "sight from below" or "undersight").

On that day, citizens all over the nation were supposed to approach public surveillance cameras and aim their own cameras back at them. The idea is that if the cameras can't be eliminated, all of us "below" should at least be keeping our eyes on those "above" who are keeping their eyes on us.

The idea originated with Steve Mann, a University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells,  computer engineering professor famous for turning himself into a cyborg. As his Web site, wearcam.org, puts it, Mann is "the first person to live in total constant intimate contact with the computer" and "sees the world as images imprinted onto his retina by rays of laser light."

WSD has been picked up by a variety of organizations and individuals, creating a decentralized de·cen·tral·ize  
v. de·cen·tral·ized, de·cen·tral·iz·ing, de·cen·tral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To distribute the administrative functions or powers of (a central authority) among several local authorities.
, Internet-based movement. It is hard to know how many people are participating, but some version of the event has been promoted since 1998.

Reporter Neil Hrab accompanied Mann on his WSD mission in Toronto and wrote about it for reason online. While many WSDers anticipate interference from the guardians of the surveillance cameras, Hrab had a different experience. "No one at any of the stores Mann and I visited looked askance a·skance   also a·skant
adv.
1. With disapproval, suspicion, or distrust: "The area is so dirty that merchants report the tourists are looking askance" Chris Black.
 at the professor's head-mounted camera," he wrote, "or got upset about the frequent flashes emanating from the digital camera he wore on his chest?' No one harassed them even for photographing a sign declaring that photography was forbidden.

Another group critical of surveillance cameras is the New York-based Surveillance Camera Players (SCP (1) (Service Control Point) A node in an SS7 telephone network that provides an interface to databases, which may reside within the SCP computer or in other computers. ), which raises public awareness by staging guerrilla theatrical performances in front of such cameras. But the SCP doesn't buy the notion of "sousveillance." Comments an SCP spokesperson, "The logic of 'shooting back' is faulty. It's like guns: Arming everyone doesn't protect us against the police. We want everyone disarmed, of both their guns and their cameras."

The SCP hasn't been as lucky as Mann was on his WSD excursion this year. Guards at Rockefeller Center once threateningly informed their troupe, "You know, we can watch you everywhere you go." "Precisely the point of our performance," the SCP spokesperson says.
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Title Annotation:Who watches the watchmen?
Author:Doherty, Brian
Publication:Reason
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Mar 1, 2003
Words:382
Previous Article:25 years ago in reason. (Citings).
Next Article:Hot water: of power plants and manatees. (Citings).(Brief Article)
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