this post was submitted on 16 Nov 2023
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I used to think that body cams for police was plainly a great idea. Now I think that there are a lot of potential problems requiring stringent regulations and enforcement along with meaningful and perhaps severe penalties for misuse.
For example:
That might go too far and might have critical gaps, but seems like a good place to start.
I worked at a place with guys who had to build and maintain cameras - parks and warehouses and intersections - and you're not far off what I remember the rules to be like.
Anything that records another person has a bunch of rules for acquisition, transfer and retention, but also security and storage and backup and sovereignty and ... the list goes on.
No cloud for sure. ;-)
Body cams are just technology. In order to be useful, they need to be controlled with appropriate policy.
Everything you suggest makes a tonne of sense. I'd argue that footage should be held by an oversight body, rather than the police, and it shouldn't be possible to turn the cameras off, only mark periods as "private".