Search Connected Photographer's 6,210 photography article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
SOCIAL IMPACT OF TECHNOLOGY
Camera phones: privacy nightmare or creative boon?
By Ian McNairn

After getting my older daughter a new phone for Christmas, with a camera function that all the newer phones seem to be including, I began taking a lively interest in the debate that is beginning to rage. Are camera phones a security liability and privacy intrusion or simply another giant societal stride that convergent and disruptive technology brings? Globally, there are estimates of 80 million camera phones sold by year-end (that's 2003, folks!), and one billion by the end of 2005. Enough to change things fundamentally.

An article on Silicon.com (at http://www.silicon.com/networks/mobile/0,39024665,39117381,00.htm) suggests that corporations risk budding James Bonds or industrial spies being able to much more easily, and essentially undetected, capture images that can compromise the operations of any organisation. As long as I can remember there have been "No cameras allowed in this Lab/Site" in the large IT company I work for...for obvious reasons.

In reality, that has been very hard to police, and now it becomes close to impossible. What do you do with every visitor? "Please hand over your mobile phone sir" or "Madam, we need to stick this security strip over your Phone camera's lens while you are with us"? What about employees, or even worse, those who might be planning to leave your employ?

The consumer face of this is, of course, digital shoplifting. Snapshotting magazine articles is still mostly constrained by the poor image quality (at the moment), but that will change soon, and so more nefarious uses will undoubtedly emerge. [They're likely to be fringe elements, like those who resell shaky videos of current feature films taken while in the theatre. -- Ed.]

On the other hand, all those clamouring about invasion of privacy are another cup of tea entirely. I have no sympathy with these concerns when exercised in public, where frankly, everything is public after all. What is an interesting dilemma however, is where camera phones are taken into gyms and indoor sports complexes, men's rooms, and ladies' rooms. Should someone be able to "talk" on a mobile in the changing room? Public exposure starts to raise a few eyebrows in this context of misuse. The etiquette and rules constraining professional photographers (and amateurs) should have the same bearing on camera phone snappers, but will they?

On the upside, the innovative uses of on-the-spot camera phones already stretches the imagination. I've taken a few sample pictures with my camera phone to illustrate the benefits.

Figure A shows a picture of an injured person, providing early injury assessment in accident situations.

FIGURE A


Camera phones can provide on-the-spot early injury assessment in accident situations. Roll over picture for a larger image.


1  ·  2  ·  3  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Extras > Photo History (8 articles)
   Photographing President Ford
   Photography, national security, and the law
   The story of the first photograph
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent Connected Photographer Articles
Incident report: denial of service attack against ConnectedPhotographer.com
How to reduce stress in this crazy, crazy world
Adobe's CS4 Master Collection is the Full Monty
Get ready for wedding photography
Here come the judge, Barack's BlackBerry, David does CNN, and more
We review Photoshop CS4: The Missing Manual and more
So long 2008, and thanks for all the phish
Connected Photographer News
Xara Photo & Graphic Designer 6 and Xara Designer Pro 6
Sinar p-slr
CorelDRAW Graphics Suite X5 Offers Integrated Access to Online Photo Sites
Samsung HZ35W
Sony Distagon T* 24mm F2 SSM preview and samples
Negatives Bought for $45 Worth $200 Million, Experts Say
Pictage and ShootQ Launch New Free Mobile Applications
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: When WordPress 3.0 Multisite won't let you log in
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
DominoPower: Smart Upgrade bug in Domino 8.5.1 (and some work-around tips)
OutlookPower: The two most motivational words in the English language
-- Advertisement --

BLOGGING AND PODCASTING WITH ONE EASY-TO-USE TOOL
Now you can publish your thoughts, opinions, and comments in your own blog or podcast.

  • Supports multiple authors and multiple blogs or podcasts.
  • Generate and publish RSS feeds for iTunes and other directories.
  • Post photos, images or animations.
  • Get feedback and have conversations with visitors to your site.

Personalize your blog or podcast with your own unique domain name -- or integrate it with your existing site by setting it up as a subdomain.

Tap here and get blogging or podcasting within minutes.

Tap here and get blogging or podcasting within minutes.

-- Advertisement --

How To Save Jobs
This book is about how to create and save jobs. Believe it or not, there's not a single book out there that specifically focuses on job creation and preservation -- until now.

This book, by ZATZ editor-in-chief David Gewirtz, is about helping your business work better. It's about helping you change the things you need to change so your company can perform more effectively.

Plus, through a grant from ZATZ, it's a free download.

Read it and reap.

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login