tv Documentary RT January 15, 2014 4:29am-5:01am EST
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people but no one is watching that's what's interesting about these two t.v. culture it takes away like the joy of having a mysterious like natural filter. photographer henrietta williams cartographer george tindall have mapped a ring of steel around london's financial district. forged from automated security gates and surveillance cameras anyone who enters is registered electronically and anything out of the ordinary triggers security protocols. even seemingly innocuous things like video cameras. of the five not if you live in your picture but with your car you can move along with your hear your car we can film whichever way we want. and what. i want to do with my job at least rely on the private security for that so if i fall through the malls you know it will add it up to the city and in fact in most cases the streets along
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this walk well given to the developers so that they could see all of the press tries in the street but also installing the defense and surveillance against terrorist attack i get sort of as you like during a phone call. surveillance systems here and just simple kindness. anyone who behaves unexpectedly triggers an . intercept agree humans can observe and evaluate behavior through the smart cameras without anyone noticing. if the camera detects an unusual event the subject is marked. one of the world's leading scientists behind the developments of smart's camera.
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it's professor james or one of kingston university. systems his team of developing can detect suspicious activity even before a crime occurs. the way is to present large volumes of data over many months possibly years and so that enables the system to develop a statistical model of what is normal and maybe what is abnormal and so then there is an automatic flagging of anything that is considered abnormal. in locations where thousands of people pass in front of the cameras every day it's even more difficult for the systems to determine what is normal behavior from what isn't. are these people simply on their way to work or does this group hide a terrorist. anyone suspected of crime in the u.k. quickly loses their right to privacy. the face what units of the london
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police presents faces of suspects to the public using footage from security cameras posted on the internet. this is a gentleman of interest. and there's rumors us appears. throws blood in their search goes on a public web saw and. i'm reaching here decide to reauthorize. the empress of america. and the images now going into the system can be viewed by the public on the face or saw it on the face which. make novel the head of image recognition it's scotland yard if you use this kind of crowd sourced policing via the internet represents a powerful new weapon in the fight against crime. so to the people of register for the up. only in the united kingdom people are very much they're quite.
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c.c.t.v. there from the police to a good job with the c.c.t.v. and they while they're happy to identify criminals is not so much a fear of surveillance at all taken in the united kingdom as possibly on all mainland europe. over the past decade the u.k. has been constantly seeking new ways to combat the perceived threat of terrorism. it is military base two hours outside of london the news techniques are getting put through that base its. mark lawrence is one of the new breed of experts offering instruction in the east of unmanned aerial vehicles or drones. you know official government sources who publicly talk about the effectiveness of this new technique only mark lawrence who speak with us. so one planning to do now is hopefully track patrick than we do on his way there or is way back if i don't see him in a shot i will fly to the horse track see if we can pick him up. the
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one takes place across three miles. ok so we've got patrick we've located in he's in the trunk so we're going to fly towards and. big brother approaches unnoticed from the air. when the target is discovered the u.a.e. becomes a constant companion it's a height of one hundred twenty meters. and what we're doing is using a g.p.s. lock to do this sort of i double click here we can just keep the subject in the center string and screen and also at the same time the unit will follow him backwards so this fly this way. when you go. to work yeah we've got you here in the house and coming out as well. so that's why it's good for covert surveillance. would be possible that we in the future. drones
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flying over our heads maybe not directly on the head but definitely the police are using these now they're using them for surveillance work and not just sneaking around spying on people there's a lot of people seem to think so sometimes to catch the bad things going on you need to be a bit i could call it sly or just secretive about it. there are plans to fit the drones with improved cameras incorporating face recognition technology. widely public previously is being exchanged for greater security. michael is the head of vanquish security back in london he's also keen to demonstrate some of his techniques. some of which are alarmingly effective. like this how did you get that well basically what we done was we remotely sourced in the market for your phone i recorded a pre-determined time and that recording then uploaded to our online platform where it yeah the phone was bugged whilst it was left unattended on
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a table during an interview with the police. professor well was also monitored. here's the photograph taken in the play station i believe. that one and there's this one here the course so obviously there were phone calls ok text messages which has been the only one we have an overview of the location which is because it's only going to location for this afternoon but in general it's also got all the photographs that have been taken and also the all the voice recordings that we have made so you just can't see everything without my knowledge actually basically. ok that's the way it works and only that. there is absolutely no way for you to be able to find a device on your phone is totally hidden only we could only we would be able to
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find it ok so this is the photograph that we found in your phone currently i don't know what they are but what i can do is have a look at the times they were taken and they cross or cross or upset with one of the recorders we have also the location. we can show you that you were. a play station on seymour street that goes through g.p.s. this is a g.p.s. report coming from your device and that's all legal this is totally legal. absolutely legal yes well i think. this demonstration has revealed it's becoming easier to covertly track individuals using modern technology. and it's happening far more often than we realize. according to ex n.s.a. analyst william binney american security agencies now have to take knology.
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for their story at all they're collecting it all and storing so the large storage facility that's what that's all about and the point is that they hope by storing it all now that sometime in the future they'll figure out how to go back into it and figure out what's important so they can retroactively analyze it that's why they need five zeta bytes of stories that you tough to store it all. it's for the u.s. government to yes he was responsible for electronic espionage a decade ago when you began to bug u.s. citizens who left the saudis to fight against terrorism seemed to change the rules of engagement. i mean they're virtually is nothing in the network that they can't have a copy of if they start targeting youth so so so what they already have your data i
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can't find out what they're doing with my data. but i know they have it ok. so i make sure i write in there whatever i whatever i had to say about them i say that in there so that when they collect that they know what i'm thinking of them. with specially developed software. without since realizing. this is a promotional video from the money factor of. a surveillance program designed for the police. it is widely used across western europe and the principle is always the same. you know thor's he's infect the victims computer with moan when they hide in a fake software update. suspect music. and the police can now upset everything as it happens on screen. the intruder
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economic down in the final. deal and the rest of life if you will be. millions around the globe struggle with hunger each day. what if someone offers a lifetime food supply no charge. against g.m.o. and we think that's. anymore the fight products are traced. there is no. evidence any problem with genetic engineering when you make a deal. or is free cheese always in
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a mouse trap. and the free. enterprise is profit. for this golden rice. right the same. first. and i would think that your. orders. to. be in the. uk is from around the world meeting. the theme of this year's meeting he states abatements keynote speaker jacob knows what it means to be prosecuted he's
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a close friend and supporter of julian song. to be free from suspicion is one of the first freedoms that is important for being free in the rest of your life when you are followed around when you are being investigated because of the whim of someone this is the beginning of the end of your freedom those two units say routinely intercept american citizens' emails no. does the n.s.a. intercept americans cell phone conversations no google searches now text messages now i'm a sun dot com orders no bank records no. but there was general alexander some most powerful person in the world probably even more powerful than the president of the united states or any at leader of any other country. first of
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all because we know for a fact. we know for a fact from our client that the n.s.a. . dragnet surveillance of all of those things well i mean i don't really use a mobile phone for anything except security. so i don't really use a mobile phone i choose not to use facebook because i really think it's. just your systems that make trade offs that are not democratically decided. the icelandic capital of reykjavik is the perfect location from which to investigate the technologies states can use to track their citizens. it was from. this infamous video from the right. those involved with the release of the video suddenly found themselves facing up to a powerful opponent. jones to to. the media and to wiki leaks
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send photos from the video to the international press. this activity transformed into a national security targets and to a right to did you to prove a c. was ripping even though there were no legal proceedings against. my person. within three days without my knowledge which means. we. do have a very bad example for the government of the united states to go into people you know even parliamentarians. countries. to. matters. most remarkable about this story is that picky to jones. that it is a member of the icelandic parliament. furthermore to it was not the only source of private digital information to hand data over to the us security agencies.
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michael in that what experts say in this field in the states for example they speculate it is face perhaps skype or ip holes no five but the judge says refuses to buy acknowledge the requests from the barriers to unseal its companies it is. jones that it did nothing illegal when she released the video but it was enough to warrant invasive snooping from the us security agencies. me. and my younger son older son. some people that i've got to know later i used to work with. with three years ago the icelandic people took to the streets the banking crisis hit hit the small island nation hard. the icelandic saucepan revolution ultimately forced the general election. to johns that was elected to the new parliament
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but for the us government she remained a target. again you only today jones to take campaigns but it's to rights and self-determination she wants iceland to become a safe haven for sensitive data. they want to put a stop to the prying eyes of the state. we actually want the last round the world cherry pick the best. e-mails for example would be protected in the same way as written correspondence. there is absolutely no country in the world this is actually properly addressed the fact how easily it is for governments and corporations to mine through our private data we in iceland focusing on creating a standard and setting an example and then it would be really ideal and this is one
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of the thoughts behind the spending want to meet initiative. be ideal if we can you know with these new set of laws create a haven in such a way that you know i would like to see it spread to other countries. the police can shut down illegal sites as was the case with this raid on the server room for online file sharing site the pirate bank. the problem is with the legal information from other providers that may be lost in the process. to protect this data from any access it needs to be in an unreachable place in the future that place could be in iceland the idea of iceland as an inverse tax saving. of say a place of protection because by the simplest information. free speech protecting people against the touch of it is
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a very nice woman to do it so it's definitely something with. which it will take time so you know. it flew for a long time every country it be a shit shit shit. but the gates of jones that's here who continue to use facebook twitter and google claiming she's a guinea pig in the mall it's space. she says whoever spied on her feels they can do it with impunity and that's how the case should be a warning. and it is a temptation to go into somebody's home without them ever being able to know about it and then i'm referring to my online home for it is just as sacred as my offline home this is where all my private stuff is this is where all my personal matters are this is where all my thoughts and all mark to beauty and movement can be traced so you know hands off my home.
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a similar case of monitoring is currently on revelling in berlin. under a home is a noted sociologist who is teaching at the home boat university. for months he was shadowed and monitored. suspected is the leader of a militant group the committed arson attacks in berlin in two thousand and seven. that's far them off while i stay only a small sum of what is the morning of the thirty first of july so some a day in the morning before seven in the summer and work up to a pounding on the front door and then a mass of armed men fell on me with exceeding three meter the ground tires in my hands fixed behind my back that's a twenty dollars off for you don't get the impression that you're in
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a film. because they behave as in one of the thrillers all action movies. give us a callous or so i was already aware that there is such a thing as house searches and arrests directed also against left wing activists this listed as a that was already going through my head but i could not understand what they actually had to do with me directly so it was an abstract fair designed at that point. a home was arrested by special detachment and brought to federal court in cannes row. only later did home learn that he had been systematically monitored. up to federal investigators but been studying his academic as ace in the widespread use of expressions such as gentrification and casualisation had inflamed their suspicions these were times also used by the militant group that had claimed responsibility for the
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berlin arson attacks. investigating authorities had created a character great to use in the investigation which suggested suspects should have extraordinary political and historical knowledge and the scientific and analytical ability to execute the attacks. following his arrest the investigating judge ordered holmes detention. after thirty days in solitary confinement the federal court ruled that there was no strong suspicion. for the first time since his arrest home is free and for the first time he learns about the surveillance protocols surrounding him the excerpts from the minutes reveal a detailed investigation into all aspects of holmes life. the investigators monitored home social environment in couldn't find any evidence
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to incriminate him. but this only caused them to intensify their surveillance. according to their logic home is an intellectual who is highly conspiratorial and expertly concealing his misdeeds. that they may be on the tail of an innocent person didn't seem to occur to his pursuance. of what conflict you have what you it's what a conflict could get if he were completely monitored our personal e-mails have been right that they have basically found ways even before the online search to gain access to our computers. or the stock of there is also a sense of political outrage in the country. over the loss of freedom to choose what the main ingredients of domestic social values should be. elementary because those personal freedoms are trampled in the course of these kinds of investigations
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and it's over fundraising and it'll last eight also just because it's. finally anyone who now search is underway home on the internet we receive a huge number of results in many articles linking him to terrorism. for the rest of his life and ray home will be tainted by the phrase terrorist suspects. people are more conscious of the need to protect their digital privacy than ever before the call for digital self-defense is heard everywhere. emails are sent encrypted but many are choosing to do without social networks like facebook and twitter. in vienna this group meet once a week for a cypher party they discuss how to make themselves invisible in the network. well of a theory there's a thought is the goal of that though when the people is operating on
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a anonymity that is from web browsing chats or other internet services to make it anonymous most of the credit. until now encryption techniques have only been in the domain of the authorities and the late internet geeks these people want to spread the word. of the potus sums that cycle parties have formed spontaneously all over the planet the interest of the population has risen in the course of more government control and more profiling by large companies such as google facebook and others and the interpretation and openness of this profound data is a major problem and a major threat. is a basic human rights. when you bear back with the internet you're back with big brother so maybe it's
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took on june sixteenth one thousand forty one we had a graduation party at school and the war broke out. the shops were always full of goods. but in september leningrad was blocked. one day mom went to saw that all the shelves were empty. in november they bombed it but die of steel warehouses with this it was the main storage place for all the food in the city people eating the earth because it had small traces of sugar in it i tried to eat it as well but i couldn't. the third night that was incredibly heavy bombing. it was a direct treetop that very shelter and everyone was buried under me. all of them went dead. oh.
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right from the scene. of the first tribute and i think the jury. on our reporters twitter. and instagram. could be in the no one on law. do we speak your language i mean some of the will not advance. news programs and documentaries and spanish more matters to you breaking news a little tune in to find those stories. you hear. detroit altie spanish find out more visit eye to eye on tivo it's calm.
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another day for egyptians to say yes or no to a new military backed constitution after attempts by islamist opponents to sabotage the voting result in bloodshed. k. is criticized for refusing to let in syrian war refugees who are struggling to survive one of the world's worst humanitarian crises in decades. say hello to a new version of cyberspace were internet providers get to decide which websites you see based on their commercial interests we explain short. question are the international coming.
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