Surveillance Works Both Ways
By Kim Zetter

Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,67216,00.html

02:00 AM Apr. 14, 2005 PT

SEATTLE -- Surveilling the surveillers. It's an idea that Number 6, the
nameless hero of the classic British TV show The Prisoner, would have loved.

In an attempt to establish equity in the world of surveillance, participants
at the Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference in Seattle this week took
to the streets to ferret out surveillance cameras and turn the tables on
offensive eyes taking their picture.

Following wearable computing guru Steve Mann into a downtown Seattle
shopping mall, about two dozen conference attendees, some of them armed with
handheld cameras, snapped photos of smoked-glass ceiling domes in Nordstrom
and Gap stores, which may or may not have contained cameras.

Companies have been known to install empty camera domes to save money while
giving the impression of surveillance.

The idea of surveillance that's powerful even if it's not actually present
was in line with the theme of this year's CFP conference -- the Panopticon.
The Panopticon was a model prison envisioned by philosopher Jeremy Bentham
that used a smoked-glass oval guard tower to induce discipline and good
behavior in prisoners who could never be certain if they were being watched.

The mere possibility that someone might be watching prisoners would be
enough to alter their behavior, ensuring, in the words of French philosopher
Michel Foucault, that the effect of surveillance would be ongoing even if
the surveillance itself wasn't. The mere perception of power would "render
its actual exercise unnecessary."

Mann, a University of Toronto professor who helped found MIT Media Lab's
Wearable Computing Project, has made it a mission to make people more aware
of the surveillance around them -- in the form of cameras concealed in store
smoke detectors, smoked-glass domes, illuminated door exit signs and even
stuffed animals sitting on store shelf displays -- by engaging in what he
calls "equiveillance through sousveillance."

The opposite of surveillance -- French for watching from above --
sousveillance refers to watching from below, essentially from beneath the
eye in the sky. It's the equivalent of keeping an eye on the eye.

With that in mind, Mann conducted his tour with conference participants to
see how those conducting surveillance would respond to being monitored.

Mann sported his signature camera eyewear, while some of the other
participants wore CFP conference bags around their necks. The bags had a
dark plastic dome stitched on one side -- modeled after store surveillance
domes -- which they pointed randomly at passersby, unnerving them.
Conference organizers had outfitted a handful of the bag domes with wireless
webcams -- they wouldn't say which bags contained cameras -- which
transmitted and recorded live streaming video to monitors in the conference
lobby.

In the stores, as conference attendees snapped pictures of three smoked
domes in the ceiling of a Mont Blanc pen shop, an employee inside waved his
arms overhead. The intruders interpreted his gesture as happy excitement at
being photographed until a summoned security guard halted the photography.

Mann asked the guard why, if the Mont Blanc cameras were recording him, he
couldn't, in turn, record the cameras. But the philosophical question, asked
again at Nordstrom and the Gap, was beyond the comprehension of store
managers who were more concerned with the practical issues of prohibiting
store photography.

At the Gap, photographers were told they couldn't take pictures because the
Gap didn't want competitors to study and copy its clothing displays. At
Nordstrom, an undercover security guard who looked like Baby Spice and
sported a badge identifying her as Agent No. 1, summoned a manager who told
Mann that customers would be disturbed by the handheld cameras.

Illogically, she didn't have a problem with participants pointing their
conference bag domes around the store to take photos, just with the handheld
cameras.

Mann said that duplicity is often necessary in order to mirror the
Kafkaesque nature of surveillance.

He has designed a wallet that requires someone to show ID in order to see
his ID. The device consists of a wallet with a card reader on it. His
driver's license can be seen only partially through a display. And in order
for someone to see the rest of his ID, they have to swipe their own ID
through the card reader to open the wallet.

He also made a briefcase that has a fingerprint scan that requires the
fingerprint of someone else to open it.

Mann quoted Simon Davies of Privacy International, a London-based nonprofit
that monitors civil liberties issues: "The totalitarian regime is the regime
that would like to know everything about everyone but reveal nothing about
itself," Mann said.

He considered such a government an "inequiveillant regime" and likened it to
signing a contract with another party without being allowed to keep a copy
of the contract.

"What I argue is that if I'm going to be held accountable for my actions
that I should be allowed to record ... my actions," Mann said. "Especially
if somebody else is keeping a record of my actions." 



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit 
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message 
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights 
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to