Major global cities by the number of CCTV cameras per 1,000 people (2025)
from Innerworld@lemmy.world to privacy@lemmy.ml on 01 Apr 00:39
https://lemmy.world/post/45005465

#privacy

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Sims@lemmy.ml on 01 Apr 01:04 next collapse

OC, being propagandized local fools, they had to include unverified vilification of Russia and China + a focus on other societies than our own. Only a few very low figures from US/UK etc, despite: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surveillance_capitalism

Jeebus, US/Western propaganda/mindset is thin and embarrassing !

ForestWerewolf@providence.root.sx on 01 Apr 01:58 next collapse

I don’t know about Russia but China is a very strong surveillance state. The US is also pretty bad and currently getting worse so don’t go on a BUT THE US!!! rant trying to defend China with whataboutism.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 01 Apr 02:20 next collapse

yeah i mean what other reason is there to include them if you don’t have actual data.

postcapitalism@lemmy.today on 01 Apr 15:13 collapse

I mean, if you think there is a low rate of cameras in Chinese cities you haven’t been there or spoken with anyone from there about it… yes the number is sensationalist and no way to verify

faizalr@piefed.social on 01 Apr 02:33 next collapse

Stay away from those cities.

vatlark@lemmy.world on 01 Apr 06:30 next collapse

Huh I would have guessed London would be far higher than LA.

FishFace@piefed.social on 01 Apr 13:00 next collapse

It’s very popular to wail about how the UK is a police state. I guess it’s because the UK is culturally close to the USA, but different in some ways, so people become most aware of those differences, no matter how big they truly are. And Americans are very bad at comparing their own country to others, so an article about how many cameras there are in the UK or in London does not necessarily get such a comparison; it only decries the situation abroad.

vatlark@lemmy.world on 01 Apr 13:17 collapse

Yeah I had never seen a comparison before. My expectation was just based on the amount of news I see on surveillance in a given area.

racoon@lemmy.ml on 01 Apr 14:07 collapse

I visited London and England once at the beginning of the century and I was appalled by the sheer number of cameras. I took many pictures of the CCTVs and the warnings. I had dreamed of living there or settling there for some time but I discarded the idea and moved elsewhere

Tenderizer78@lemmy.ml on 01 Apr 11:51 next collapse

CCTV isn’t a problem. It’s mass surveillance that’s the problem. As the saying goes, “show me the man and I’ll show you the crime”. With enough information the state can always find something to turn their political enemy into a criminal. The government should not be able to do that with a mere flick of the wrist.

If anything a higher number of CCTV’s is a good thing, assuming the number of all types of camera combined remains constant between cities.

mathemachristian@lemmy.ml on 01 Apr 14:42 next collapse

by visual capitalist

hmmmm wonder if they had any agenda or ideological bias in their estimation of china

PierceTheBubble@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 20:41 collapse

This nice visualization seems to be based on numbers from Comparitech’s ‘The World’s Most Surveilled Cities’ (which is worth a read). Which states China’s numbers can only be based on estimates (as the CCP doesn’t publicly disclose any real numbers): the speculative nature of which, possibly being the reason why it’s not included here. The others are based on sources (one has to request access to, for some reason: which I’m not willing to do), but doubt represent reality: as it correctly recognizes many “private” cameras are public facing (especially in the Western world), which also makes it near impossible to discern which are actually public facing (which might not be all that relevant).

Any data processor of relevant size within the European Union (including those processing camera footage), is required by the GDPR to have an effective government agent (or “data protection officer”) to oversee their operation. This agent (likely “working” for multiple processors) under professional secrecy, is legally required to comply with authorities’ requests for additional processing (including: making accessible such data, apply processing operations outside of its processor’s legal basis (without disclosing it to them), or even delete information): requests not to be disclosed publicly. So effectively, the EU’s authorities have a legal backdoor to all these “private” cameras; and if visualized would create an entirely different picture.