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by ars
1398 days ago
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Recording the street is the most important part of recording for crime detection. If someone knocks off the side mirror of my car by driving too close, I shouldn't be able to record that? I shouldn't be able to capture the license plate so I know who it is? You do get that you are publicly visible when walking down the street, right? People are visible in their gardens too, but I can at least understand making it illegal to record other private property, but the pubic street is reading it too far. |
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Your right to take the footage is in competition with peoples right to a reasonable level of privacy even in public spaces, as there is a huge difference between being seen by someone, being filmed by someone when they happen to be there, and being constantly filmed by automated systems that may or may not be appropriately controlled to ensure images are not spread.
The approach taken tends to vary between outlawing it or allowing it with restrictions, including making you subject to retention and subject access policies.
E.g. in the UK, which is notorious for the amounts of CCTV, you can cover public areas if necessary, but you then need to be prepared to delete footage of people on request, respond to subject access requests, ensure the footage is kept securely, ensuring the footage is deleted regularly, and restrict access to the footage. You also need to be able to provide - in writing if requested - legitimate reasons for doing so. Here's the ICO's advice page on the subject[1]
[1] https://ico.org.uk/your-data-matters/domestic-cctv-systems-g...