Don't Tape Me, Bro! Taser Launches Headcam for Cops

By Aaron Rowe
Wired News

March 10, 2009 | 3:25:00 PM

http://blog.wired.com/defense/2009/03/taseraxon.html


Officers: Are you sick and tired of excessive force lawsuits? Well cheer 
up. Taser has a plan to give your police department its own CYA reality 
TV show.

The less-lethal weapons company has launched a wearable computer, called 
Axon, that will let cops record every minute of their day and upload it 
to a secure website. From there, they can share their favorite memories 
with friends, family, and jurors.

"Our Axon and Evidence.com technology will be a lifeline to protect 
truth," says Steve Tuttle, the vice president of communications for Taser.

For years, cops around the world have been accused of being a little too 
eager to reach out and stun someone. For example, a Denver Post report 
found that 90 percent of the subjects tased by the police department 
there were unarmed. Most times, the weapon was used to "force people to 
obey orders, to shortcut physical confrontations and, in several cases, 
to avoid having to run after a suspect." In Sarasota, officers recently 
tased a naked senior. In Wales, cops even zapped a bunch of sheep.

Not long ago, the less-lethal weapons company started offering a camera 
accessory that sits on the bottom of its people-zappers, but those 
devices could only record the drama that takes place once the weapon is 
drawn and the safety is off -- so it could miss some of the most 
important moments.

The new camera is head-mounted, so it will record everything the user 
lays his eyes on. Each headset plugs into a Linux-powered computer that 
looks curiously similar to a PlayStation Portable, which has an LCD 
screen so that officers can watch instant replays of their favorite 
tackles and shakedowns.

When the day is done, just plug the recorder into the Synapse docking 
station, and all of the evidence will be automatically uploaded to 
Taser's pair of data warehouses via a 128-bit encrypted connection. 
Well, most of it, anyway. According to the Axon brochure, the system 
features a "One-Touch 'Privacy Mode'" which "temporarily suspends 
recording." In other words, cops can still work the streets -- without 
being caught on tape.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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