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SMALL BUSINESS
Harris Poll Shows 96 Percent of Americans Support Uses of Video Surveillance to Counteract Terrorism
Current camera surveillance, however, is largely ineffective, primarily used after an event, and subject to the attention span of security personnel monitoring multiple screens
Business Wire
A recent Harris Poll survey indicates that 96 percent of U.S. citizens
feel the federal government and law enforcement agencies should be able
to use video surveillance in an effort to counteract terrorism and help
protect U.S. citizens in specific public places. Four out of five adults
feel that in extreme cases, such as a terrorist attack, the government
should be able to use
any available means to protect citizens,
and more than half (54 percent) of U.S. adults are even willing to put a
portion of the government’s stimulus funds toward setting up video
surveillance to help reduce crime.
The results are at odds with current perceptions about the use of video
surveillance, by revealing that only a small minority of Americans is
concerned about the federal government or law enforcement agencies using
surveillance cameras to monitor public places. That Americans don't mind
being watched is especially relevant in light of the recently exposed
domestic terror plot in Boston, and subsequent FBI intelligence
indicating that Al Qaida recruits are reportedly being encouraged to
perform acts of terrorism inside the U.S.
However, citizen support of video surveillance rests on the assumption
that more cameras will result in more secure environments, but that
isn’t the case. Recently, the security staff at the George Washington
Bridge in New York City—responsible for monitoring bridge cameras and
security kiosks—was photographed sleeping on the job. Thus, camera
proliferation alone (
The
New York Times estimates that
London has more than 4.2 million closed-circuit TV cameras) will not
solve the problem. Many of these cameras go completely unmonitored
because there are simply not enough human eyes available to watch all of
the video feeds.
“The widespread adoption of video-camera technology has not made the job
of the security officer any easier, nor has it helped obtain actionable
intelligence
before an intrusion,” said John Frazzini, President
of Houston-based
Behavioral
Recognition Systems, Inc. (BRS Labs), and a former Secret Service
agent.
Adds Frazzini, “We have been working with high-level security customers
in the U.S. and around the world to put a new approach to
work—behavioral analytics. Ten days after the terrorist attacks in
Mumbai last Thanksgiving, a major international hotel installed BRS
Labs’ software, AISight™ (pronounced eye sight), which was designed to
autonomously monitor hundreds of cameras simultaneously, and to provide
real-time actionable intelligence. In just a few days the hotel’s
security staff was able to improve the safety of the hotel’s perimeter.
We are also deployed in several high-security U.S. locations including
seaports, power plants, nuclear plants, and global financial
institutions.”
BRS Labs' technology blends computer vision, machine learning and
artificial intelligence; it sends instant and reliable alerts to a
myriad of PDA devices, and the software is compatible with all legacy
camera systems.
“Traditional video surveillance approaches have failed because they
ignore the fact that every environment is unique,” said Ray Davis,
founder of BRS Labs. “These methods also require expensive,
labor-intensive programming to define specific objects or activities a
system should look for, so unexpected security incidents are missed,”
said Davis. “Any new technology approach to video surveillance must
deliver the right level of protection and the right level of privacy
from small, simple deployments to the most complex security environments
without human intervention required.”
AiSight
takes visual input from a camera, learns what activities
and behaviors are typical, and generates real-time alerts when it
identifies activities that are
not normal. It is a
reasoning-based surveillance technology that functions in a manner
similar to the human brain. It takes in external visual input
(computer vision), while its machine learning engine observes the scene,
learns and recognizes behavioral patterns and responds accordingly.
Surveillance is 24/7, and since the software learns the scene, the false
positives are greatly reduced.
The Harris organization’s online survey, commissioned by BRS Labs, was
conducted from May 28 through June 1, 2009, with 2,416 adults (ages 18
and over) in the United States interviewed.
About BRS Labs
BRS Labs is a software development company that provides the industry’s
first cognitive video analytics software that adaptively learns behavior
patterns in complex surveillance environments. BRS Labs is the only
company that has been able to apply computer-vision and machine-learning
capabilities to video analytics, thereby greatly enhancing operator
awareness and effectiveness in improving security. No human is required
to define parameters for the software to recognize behavior; the
software reports unusual or suspicious behaviors based on memories it
has acquired through observations over time. BRS Labs was founded in
November 2005 and is headquartered in Houston, Tex. The company is
funded by $47 million in private equity.
About Harris Interactive
Harris Interactive is a global leader in custom market research. With a
long and rich history in multimodal research, powered by our science and
technology, we assist clients in achieving business results. Harris
Interactive serves clients globally through our North American, European
and Asian offices and a network of independent market research firms.
Copyright Business Wire 2009
2009-10-22 07:27:00
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