DocumentCode
3026504
Title
Using mobile communications to assert privacy from video surveillance
Author
Brassil, Jack
Author_Institution
HP Labs., Princeton, NJ, USA
fYear
2005
fDate
4-8 April 2005
Abstract
We propose a novel use of mobile communications to permit individuals to assert a preference for privacy from video surveillance. Our system, called Cloak, grants an individual the right to prohibit others from distributing video containing their image. We present our system architecture and operation, and demonstrate how the system enhances privacy while requiring no change to existing surveillance technology. We use analysis and simulation to show that an individual´s video privacy can be protected even in the presence of the many sources of error (e.g., unsynchronized clocks, unreliable communications, location error) we anticipate in a deployed system, and argue that there are no insurmountable technical barriers to Cloak´s large-scale deployment. Given the threat to privacy posed by the rapid and widespread deployment of camera-phones, we maintain that today´s surveillance systems must be urgently augmented with privacy enhancing technology.
Keywords
data privacy; mobile communication; mobile computing; surveillance; telecommunication security; video signal processing; Cloak architecture; mobile communication; pervasive computing; video privacy; video surveillance; Analytical models; Cameras; Humans; Information security; Laboratories; Lifting equipment; Mobile communication; Privacy; Space technology; Video surveillance;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium, 2005. Proceedings. 19th IEEE International
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2312-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IPDPS.2005.447
Filename
1420259
Link To Document