The Honest Scotsman wrote:
Yes TDO parking in a disabled bay may be an offence, and if someone does so they may be fined or whatever, but I am not so sure about these things being done remotely by CCTV for example, after all you may have broken down or been taken ill, how would they know?
Your implication seems to be that I said that people should be brougth to book on the flimsiest of evidence without due regard to due process etc, when in fact I made the opposite point.
In fact the essence of my earlier point is that if these people are guilty then it would save a lot of time and hassle if they would just do the decent thing and put their hands up - presumably you have no objections to that?
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The point I was making was about Civil Rights, does CCTV breach article eight of the ECHR, and what about the Data protection act?
The DPA? Let's not go there again
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What about intels lip reading software,
http://www.intel.com/technology/computi ... /avcsr.htmAVSR could be an interesting one as it develops, not only will they be able to watch your every move they would also be able to lip read what you were saying
Interesting, but if such a system is ever used then presumably the pros and cons will be debated and appropriate safeguards put in place?
The thing is that I can't really see what the problem is with things like CCTV. For example, say a driver was suspected of cherry-picking by asking for three times the meter (say). So suppose licensing staff watched him and perhaps intercepted a few of his knockbacks and asked what he said. The more general surveillance could be done either visually or using CCTV, so what's the difference between using CCTV evidence as corroboration as opposed to the visual evidence of a council employee, since of course the CCTV evidence is likely to be a lot more effective and reliable than a written or verbal account of what a council employee saw?
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The funny thing is when a crime is committed, and by crime I mean a crime against the person or their property,assaults, murders, rapes, burglaries etc these are often seen as the norm now in this Country now, try having a Cigarette though, even although they are very happy to take your tax you are public enemy number one
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Well I did agree that smoking bans etc were a step too far, particularly given the extent of current rule-breaking, but you seem to take the view that only more serious offences should be pursued, which comes back to my earlier point?
So which offences should be ignored?
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Wars TDO, it's all wars these days
Theres a war on everything and a csar for everything, funny thing is though we are in a worse state than ever.
Yes, but isn't that because the measures are largely ineffective, and more spin than substance?
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Is that why they have these cameras, so a working person, a self employed one at that, can be watched over to make sure he is carrying out his own business in a way they see fit, rather than in way he sees fit, which brings us back to the main thrust of the debate, should someone who owns say an off licence have a council CCTV installed in their shop so that they can be watched at all times by an operator?
I don't really think that would be justified unless there's a suspicion of wrongdoing, but I'm not really sure if that's a good analogy with the taxi trade.
But I take it you're saying that there shouldn't be any rules for the taxi trade, or which rules would you like to see discarded, which is presumably better than non-enforcement, which just benefits the cheats and penalises those honest enough to abide by the rules.
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I simply do not except that this amount of intrusive behaviour by the state against a working person is or can be morally justified.
So you would dump all CCTV, taxi trade rules etc?
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Do you think we should give up our Liberty for Freedom TDO

I get the feeling you are trying to justify living in a surveillance society, you know it feels wrong TDO, but you are now firmly in the authoritarian camp, you wish to stifle the debate by steering it away from the Spy cameras to one of law breaking which you say is now rife in this Country, funny that do they not say the crime figures are down all the time.
Au contraire; I was not trying to steer the debate away from spy cameras, all I was doing was to point out that you seemed to object to rule enforcement per se, rather than the methodology adopted, which I assumed from your statement:
The Honest Scotsman wrote:
But this is a strange phenomenon this one, you only mirror the mindset of an increasingly large proportion of the populace, quite worrying really, the authorities should take action against everyone for the slightest misdemeanor and should rule us with a rod of iron, we deserve no more?
This is my World as well as the other 6 or so billion people in it, I entered it a free being and I hope to exit it as a free being, you can have your authoritarian tyranny, I choose not to except it without at least giving it some critical thought
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I am sorry, I am guilty of Oldthink, but life seemed so much more enjoyable then, I felt kind of free back then, I think I liked that feeling, a prison without bars thats where we are headed TDO, still it's for our own good.
Well of course things were better in the past - I'm not that old, but old enough to remember that my dad didn't lock the car up at night.
But in my view what you call the authoritarian tyranny is necessary because it's required to stop society falling into an abyss.
Personally I think that if the surveillance society that you object to was reversed then life would be a lot less enjoyable still, and I don't think feeling 'kind of free' would quite compensate for that.