Privacy rights face a crisis. Governments around the world have been taking overreaching, fear-based surveillance measures against essential online freedoms. Organizing an international resistance demands a complex understanding of both the latest online surveillance trends and of long-standing threats to privacy.

Every year, Freedom Not Fear continues to organize a broad international protest against these threats to our civil liberties, and challenge the hyperbolic rhetoric of fear that permeates the security and privacy debate. This September 14th-17th, concerned European Internet users will descend on Brussels to participate in an international week of action against invasive surveillance initiatives. Events will also be staged in Luxembourg and Sydney. Freedom Not Fear’s slogan: Stop the surveillance mania!

This year’s street protest in Brussels has been announced for Saturday 15th at 11 a.m. Brussels time. The BarCamp schedule for the long weekend in Brussels is available here. There will be a CCTV spotting game in the city center.

EFF is joining the campaign to call attention to pervasive global surveillance measures and to spotlight the movements that have sprung up to oppose them. EFF will be posting articles regularly over the next week, starting today. You can follow our series by subscribing to EFF on  Twitter, identi.ca, Facebook, Google Plus or by checking back to this page on EFF.org. We’ll be listing the articles below.

Background

 

The Freedom Not Fear movement emerged out of widespread European outrage at the EU’s 2006 Mandatory Data Retention Directive — an EU law requiring ISPs and telcos to store, for a minimum of six months to two years, data such as who communicates with whom, when, where, and how. In practice, data has often been stored for longer. Large databases continue to be fed with personal data on millions of innocent Europeans, threatening anonymity, privacy, and the confidentiality of journalists’ sources. Since its origins in 2008, Freedom Not Fear has developed the general message: fundamental rights like privacy, free expression, due process, and democratic participation are jeopardized when reactionary, fear-driven surveillance systems penetrate our societies.

Freedom Not Fear Series:

1. Freedom Not Fear: CCTV Surveillance Cameras In Focus
2. Freedom Not Fear: Sydney Edition

Freedom Not Fear: CCTV Surveillance Cameras In Focus

NOTE: On Sept. 14 – 17, activists with the Freedom not Fear movement will stage an international week of action to oppose various forms of surveillance. EFF is spending this week examining surveillance trends and spotlighting movements that have sprung up in opposition. You can follow our series here.

In June of 2012, a grand total of eight violent crimes were recorded in the sleepy town of Royston (pop. 14,570), a Hertfordshire, England community best known for having a volunteer brass band and an historic cave dating back to medieval times. Ranked as a low-crime area by UK Crime Stats, Royston has nevertheless landed at the center of a raging controversy about the extraordinary security measures in place. All around the small town, closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras are trained on the streets, programmed to automatically record the plate numbers of each and every automobile passing through.

The cameras are part of the UK’s Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) network, a system constructed by the Association of Chief Police Officers. The vehicle registration numbers are stored in a database, and automatically checked against a “hot list” displaying vehicles of interest. But regardless of whether there’s a match with a suspicious automobile, photographs of the plate numbers are stored for two years, while photographs of the vehicles and their occupants are kept for 90 days. Police refer to the camera system as a “ring of steel.”

Freedom Not Fear, an international week of action that’s being staged in Brussels Sept. 14 through 17, will feature a number of meetings and events drawing attention to growing and ubiquitous CCTV surveillance. Organizers from No-CCTV, a group that’s challenging the Royston ring of steel, and others hope to use Freedom Not Fear to raise awareness about the growing deployment of surveillance technology, launch creative responses, and identify solutions for reversing the trend.

Screen Shot from “We Watch” website, a project focused on surveillance in London.

UK activists from No-CCTV, Privacy International and Big Brother Watch teamed up earlier this year to register a formal complaint with the UK Information Commissioner, decrying the privacy problems inherent in the Royston program. They’ve lodged similar complaints about ubiquitous CCTVs on public transit, and mounted a challenge against another “ring of steel” that was being constructed in the UK city of Birmingham. “The system has the potential to be a mass surveillance tool,” privacy advocates warned. “If the police are not interested in motorists who are not on hotlists then it begs the question: Why do they gather this information?” They also voiced concern that the ring of steel is just part of a trend. “For Royston,” activists warned, “read any town in the UK.”

Face-off against Facewatch

On Sept. 15, Freedom Not Fear activists will hold a meeting to discuss coordinating international responses to surveillance cameras, particularly in the face of new developments in surveillance technology.

Law enforcement in the UK recently unveiled the use of an app called Facewatch to track down low-level offenders. It utilizes footage showing people’s faces, captured via surveillance cameras, to create a database of suspects. The database is then made publicly available to anyone who downloads the app with a mobile phone. In a bizarre and highly problematic use of crowdsourcing, members of the general public are asked to sift through the collection of photographs and send identifying information about anyone they may recognize to the police. “Scotland Yard says it has loaded its ‘Facewatch’ app with nearly 5,000 pictures of suspects wanted either in connection with low-level crime or the summer riots which hit the capital last year,” notes a report in the Associated Press.

Organizers of anti-CCTV events at Freedom Not Fear say mounting a response to the privacy-invasive Facewatch program ranks high on the agenda.

“We are concerned about the growing use of CCTV cameras to produce wanted posters, and together with other campaigners at Freedom Not Fear in Brussels, we will discuss the Facewatch system in the UK – and hopefully produce a statement/decision from an International Surveillance Working Group,” says Charles Farrier from No-CCTV UK.

Creative responses to CCTV

While No-CCTV has lodged a number of formal complaints responding to massive CCTV deployment projects initiated by law enforcement, other forms of anti-surveillance camera activism take a more creative approach. On Sept. 15, for example, a group of activists plan to lead a “camspotting” excursion through Brussels.

“Camspotting is something like ‘a citygame with a twist,’” says Wim Vanderbussche of Datapanik.org, an organization based in Belgium. “It’s basically about participants spotting as many cameras as possible and putting them on a map.”

As part of the exercise, activists will go out into the streets of Brussels, snap photographs of every CCTV camera they find, write down the location, and collectively plot them on an interactive map. Datapanik and the Flemish League of Human Rights started a project of plotting all visible surveillance cameras in various locations in Belgium, and hope to build upon this effort.

campspotting_0On June 8, anti-CCTV activists staged an international “1984 Action Day” – timed to coincide with the publication anniversary of George Orwell’s classic novel – to call attention to the surveillance cameras gazing from every direction at ordinary citizens going about their daily business. The day marked the launch of a website called We Watch, developed by German designer Julia Lowczycka, that educates the public about surveillance in London via a flash graphical interface called Maupa’s World.

In Birmingham (UK), campaigners ventured out on a wet and windy day to ask shoppers if they wanted to buy photographs of themselves — which had already been taken without their permission by CCTV cameras as they walked through the city center. The shoppers who stopped to find out more were shown a portfolio of CCTV images, and asked to consider whether they thought it was acceptable that they are constantly filmed as they go about their daily business.

In Berlin, around 40 campaigners took a surveillance walk around the city, and a group called Out of Control Berlin screened short films documenting the growing CCTV phenomenon.

Another fun activity scheduled during Freedom Not Fear will involve creating head masks out of brown paper bags to guard against CCTV, a lighthearted and creative effort to help people assert their “right to be left alone.”

 

The “Leipziger Kamera” was another German citizens’ initiative against CCTV.

“The paper basket workshop sounds funny, and it is, but there is a serious background,” says Michael Ebeling, part of the German Working Group On Data Retention Hanover. “Human beings need place and time free from any surveillance to develop to individual personalities, to grow as autonomous and discrete thinking characters. Therefore surveillance is like poison for … society as long as we believe in democracy and humanity. Surveillance-free public spaces need to be preserved, CCTV-infiltrated ones to be recaptured. That is our right as free citizens!”

Is CCTV Effective?

A report released by Big Brother Watch in February of 2012 details how local law enforcement agencies spent $515 million on CCTV in four years. The report found that there are at least 51,600 CCTV cameras controlled by 428 local authorities in Britain, and a 2002 study pegged the total number of CCTV cameras in the UK at around 4.2 million. In London, it’s estimated that on average, more than 300 different cameras might record an individual throughout the course of a single day.

Despite the intensive resources devoted to CCTV, there is a body of evidence demonstrating that the surveillance measure actually does little to deter crime.

“Many people believe that the presence of cameras is overall making them more secure. But there’s a key conundrum in the world of camera surveillance,” notes sociologist David Lyon, who directs the Surveillance Studies Center at the University of Queens in Ontario, Canada. “It continues to expand … despite the fact that there is no study in the world that has shown conclusively that camera surveillance operates effectively for the purposes, and in the manner, that it is generally advertised and understood to operate.”

UK resident Cory Doctorow, writing in an editorial in The Guardian, also seized on this point. “Although study after study has concluded that CCTVs don’t deter most crime (a famous San Francisco study showed that, at best, street crime shifted a few metres down the pavement when the CCTV went up), we’ve been told for years that we must all submit to being photographed all the time because it would keep the people around us from beating us, robbing us, burning our buildings and burglarising our homes,” he writes.

But EFF alongside activists from Big Brother Watch, No-CCTV, Privacy International, Datapanik.org, The Flemish League for Human Rights, Arbeitskreis Vorratsdatenspeicherung”  (a Hanover chapter of the German Working Group on Data Retention) and others aren’t buying into the argument that privacy should continue to be sacrificed for a false sense of security. And during Freedom Not Fear, it’s the crowd that will be focused on the camera.