Privacy rights advocates and civil liberties campaigners in Europe are raising the alarm about a new surveillance system that monitors conversations in public.
The surveillance system, dubbed Sigard, has been installed in Dutch city centers, government offices and prisons, and a recent test-run of the technology in Coventry, England, has British civil rights experts worried that the right to privacy will disappear in efforts to fight street crime.
The system’s manufacturer, Sound Intelligence, says it works by detecting aggression in speech patterns.
“Ninety percent of all incidents involving physical aggression are preceded by verbal aggression,” the Sound Intelligence Web site says. “The ability to spot verbal aggression before it turns into a violent outbreak delivers valuable time to security personnel and enables speedy intervention.”
According to the UK’s Sunday Telegraph, the city of Coventry recently finished a six-month test run of the system, which involved the installation of seven microphones around a crime-prone nightlife district. A spokesperson for the city said the system is “no longer in use.”
[more...]
Related posts:
- Anonymous ISP launched by Sweden’s Pirate Party
- Report: Israeli scientists discover way to counterfeit DNA
- The Class War Launched by America’s Wealthiest Is Getting More Savage
- Facebook quietly switches on facial recognition tech by default
- The Federal Reserve Plans To Identify “Key Bloggers” And Monitor Billions Of Conversations About The Fed On Facebook, Twitter, Forums And Blogs
- New tech system has red light to mark ‘pre-crime’ suspects


1 comment
Anonymous
July 5, 2010 at 7:59 pm (UTC 1)
PRECRIME