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Sunday, May 24, 2009

Everyone is a superstar in London. Well, not really.

How do you feel if you are photographed every minute as you walk on a road, buy a drink, catch a bus or just stand on a bridge and stare at the views around? Well, you feel like I do. A superstar? Hell now! I feel like I’m meeting the future of real-time entity monitoring. I’m not a criminal nor am I a VIP to demand this level of active monitoring. I’m just a traveler in the London city.

London has more than 500,000 closed circuit cameras strategically placed and takes a significant share out of the 4.5 million cameras the government installed all across the United Kingdom. One of my colleagues from RSA worked on this project in the past and was telling about the level of sophistication they have in the control rooms and systems. It sounded stranger than fiction.

If you land in Heathrow and travel through London, you are probably photographed 400 times in a day and state-of-the-art face and entity recognition and tracking technology is used if they want to connect the dots and focus on you.


I work in a field where we strive to prevent bad things from happening in life – well, more in the information fabric. Most of it is related to protecting the privacy and identity of people. But truly, I think that true privacy is a thing of the past. As we digitize more information about individuals and as computing power reaches a level where real time correlations of multiple data points are possible with commercially available technology, many more organizations will have systems in places to watch you 24 X 7.

We are not far from a day when our friends and unfortunately, others too can just “see” us in real time anytime they want irrespective of where we are. They will even get information about our body temperature and other vitals to figure out our mood. So just get used to it.

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