Martin Larsen ytrede sig i <494599c0$0$90272$14726298@news.sunsite.dk>
med dette:
>"@" <124@invalid.net> skrev i meddelelsen
>news:ra4bk41rvnn3v0k0bgaq1bf2kc1077hngi@4ax.com...
>> On Sun, 14 Dec 2008 09:31:40 +0100, "Bo Warming" <bwng@bwng.dk> wrote:
>>
>>>Islam behøver+afskyr overvågning
>>>Selvfølgelig kan vi aldrig få skovlen under hærværk mm uden elektronisk
>>>overvågning
>>
>>
>> <<<<<<<<<<<
>>
http://politiken.dk/indland/article613148.ece
>> Tv-overvågning i fem forskellige boligområder i England har ikke ført
>> til det forventede fald i kriminaliteten. Det har heller ikke givet
>> beboerne større tryghed.
>>
>> Det siger den danske forsker i overvågning Anders Albrechtslund fra
>> Aalborg Universitet, som også sidder i ledelsen af Forum For
>> Overvågningsstudier.
>>
>> »Når politikere siger, at overvågning virker, så er der faktisk ikke
>> dokumentation for at sige det, og det vil jeg godt gå i rette med. Der
>> er ikke belæg for det«, siger Anders Albrechtslund til politiken.dk.
>>
>>
>> Det hjalp ikke i England
>> Det britiske indenrigsministerium har undersøgt effekten af
>> overvågning i fem forskellige boligområder. Ingen af områderne kunne
>> notere et fald i kriminaliteten, efter at overvågningen var indført,
>> oplyser Anders Albrechtslund.
>>
>> »Visse steder steg kriminaliteten faktisk. Undersøgelsen viste også,
>> at overvågningen ikke fik borgerne til at føle sig mere trygge«, siger
>> Anders Albrechtslund.
>> <<<<<<<<
>>
>
>Selvfølgelig hjælper det. Man hører gang på gang at gerningsmand bliver
>fanget pga overvågningskamera.
>Anders Albrechtslund er givetvis godhedsmagnat der vil gøre indtryk på sine
>kommunistvenner med forrykt pladder.
>
>Opfølgning og hjemsendelse er hvad der mangler.
21 September 2007, London, England: "CCTV Cameras Don't Solve Crimes,
Say London Politicians. The city has over 10,000 publicly funded CCTV
cameras in public areas, but only one in five crimes are solved," by
Peter Sayer, IDG News Service.
Surveillance cameras in London are not helping solve crime, according to
local politicians. The city has over 10,000 publicly funded CCTV cameras
in public areas, but only one in five crimes are solved, said Dee
Doocey, a spokeswoman for the Liberal Democrats political party on the
London Assembly, the elected body which determines transport and
policing policy for London's 32 boroughs and the City of London itself.
Using figures obtained from the London boroughs, the Metropolitan Police
Service and public transport authorities through Freedom of Information
Act requests, the Liberal Democrats compared the number of crimes solved
in each borough with the number of CCTV cameras installed there.
"Our figures show that there is no link between a high number of CCTV
cameras and a better crime clear-up rate," she said. "Boroughs with
thousands of CCTV cameras are no better at doing so than those which
have a few dozen."
Proponents of CCTV's usefulness usually focus on its role in preventing
crime, rather than solving it. But although the cameras across London's
public transport system allowed police officers to identify within a few
days those responsible for the July 7, 2005, tube-train bombings in the
city, the cameras did nothing to prevent the attack. And a detailed
study of 14 public CCTV installations in a 2005 report by the Home
Office Research, Development and Statistics Directorate, "Assessing the
impact of CCTV," <
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs05/hors292.pdf>
concluded that "the CCTV schemes that have been assessed had little
overall effect on crime levels."
Over the last decade, London's CCTV cameras have cost taxpayers there
around 200 million pounds ($401 million), Doocey said, calling for a
broader debate on the city's policing.
--
15 January 2008, Sweden: "Big Brother Techniques Fail," Sveriges Radio.
Surveillance does not stop crime -- that's according to a report from
the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention. Currently there are
approximately 2100 permits for surveillance cameras in Stockholm alone,
a number which increases by 10 percent every year. According to an
article in the Stockholm City newspaper the results were based on over
40 different research reports from four different countries. The only
place where surveillance was found to have a significant impact was in
car park stations where crime had fallen by 51% after surveillance was
introduced.
--
21 March 2008, San Francisco, California: "City's crime cameras
shortsighted," by Will Reisman, The Examiner.
Cameras in The City have little effect in deterring crime on violent
street corners, according to a new study. Seventy-four cameras have been
installed in some of the San Francisco's most dangerous neighborhoods as
city officials battle with an increasing homicide rate that was just two
short of hitting triple digits last year. Homicides within 250 feet of
the cameras were eradicated. However, homicides in areas from 250 feet
to 500 feet increased.
"It shows that if people are going to commit a crime they can just go
around the corner from a camera to do it," police Commissioner Joseph
Alioto-Veronese said. "This system will only work if we plan on having a
camera every 100 feet, which is just not realistic."
--
7 May 2008, London, England: "Britain's multi-billion-pound CCTV network
'an utter fiasco which has failed to cut crime,'" by Craig Brown, The
Scotsman.
Britain's network of CCTV cameras has been branded "an utter fiasco" for
failing to cut crime, despite billions of pounds being spent on it.
Detective Chief Inspector Mick Neville, who is in charge of
closed-circuit television for the Metropolitan Police Force, claimed
only 3 per cent of the capital's street robberies are solved using
security camera footage and criminals are not afraid of being caught on
film. The UK has the highest level of camera surveillance in the world,
according to civil liberty groups and security experts, with an
estimated 4.2 million CCTV cameras on buildings, shops, roads and
stations.
Mr Neville told the Security Document World Conference in London: "CCTV
was originally seen as a preventative measure. Billions of pounds has
been spent on kit, but no thought has gone into how the police are going
to use the images and how they will be used in court. It's been an utter
fiasco."
His comments echo a government report last October which said most CCTV
footage is not of high enough quality to help police identify offenders,
with many cameras focused on enforcing bus lanes as well as stopping
crime. The report said anecdotal evidence suggests more than 80 per cent
of CCTV images supplied to the police are not up to scratch.
--
Held og lykke med at finde reel valid dokumentation for at
overvågningskameraer virker.
--
Allan Stig Kiilerich Frederiksen
"When you try to change a mans paradigm, you must keep in mind that he
can hear you only through the filter of the paradigm he holds."
-Myron Tribus