Atlantic.com: “An Eye Without an ‘I’: Justice and the Rise of Automated Surveillance”

Atlantic.com: An Eye Without an ‘I’: Justice and the Rise of Automated Surveillance by Ross Andersen:

Over the past decade, video surveillance has exploded. In many cities, we might as well have drones hovering overhead, given how closely we’re being watched, perpetually, by the thousands of cameras perched on buildings. So far, people’s inability to watch the millions of hours of video had limited its uses. But video is data and computers are being set to work mining that information on behalf of governments and anyone else who can afford the software. And this kind of automated surveillance is only going to get more sophisticated as a result of new technologies like iris scanners and gait analysis.

Yet little thought has been given to the ethics of perpetually recording vast swaths of the world. What, exactly, are we getting ourselves into?

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