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Paris Fashion Week Stunning Shoe Collection 2010-2012
by Shazy | 5:38 AM in fashion, London, milan fashion week, Models, New York Fashion Week, paris fashion week, Paris Fashion Week Stunning Shoe Collection 2010-2012, red carpet, runway, spring/ summer |
Shocking study reveals UK has one CCTV for every 32 people
by Shazy | 6:40 AM in government, London, police, Shocking study reveals UK has one CCTV for every 32 people, technology, the chinese, the police, united states |
Shocking study reveals UK has one CCTV for every 32 people
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Shocking study reveals UK has one CCTV for every 32 people |
In Big Brother Britain there is an incredible one CCTV camera for every 32 citizens, a study has revealed.
The revelation that 1.85 million cameras are watching our every move confirms the shocking extent of surveillance in 21st century Britain.
Coming a day after it emerged tiny drones could be used to spy on Britons, the CCTV study is sure to add fuel to the debate that we have become a Big Brother state.The research involved police community support officers counting every camera in Cheshire and extrapolating the results nationwide to provide a reliable estimate of the level of CCTV surveillance in the UK.
Officers counted 12,333 cameras in the area, according to a study published in CCTV Image magazine, the majority of which were inside premises, rather than facing public street.
The research also found that most CCTV cameras in the UK are likely to be privately owned, with only 504 of Cheshire’s cameras run by public bodies.
After the Cheshire results were extrapolated nationwide, taking into account urban and rural areas and transport networks, the number of cameras was adjudged to be 1,853,681 – enough for one camera for every 32 citizens in the UK.Despite the proliferation of CCTV cameras, police admit that just one crime is solved for every 1,000 cameras.
Deputy Chief Constable Graeme Gerrard, the lead on CCTV for the Association of Chief Police Officers said the latest numbers, based on a map of CCTV systems in Cheshire, were intended to ‘inject more rigorous figures into the debate’ over Britain as a surveillance state.
A widely quoted estimate of 4.2 million cameras in the UK was based on a 1.5km road in a busy shopping district and extrapolated out for the entire UK, he explained.
And the previous estimate that the ‘average Briton is caught on security cameras some 300 times a day was based on a fictional tour of CCTV hot-spots.
However, he admitted: ‘The figure of 1.85m is still a significant number of CCTV cameras.
‘I'm not saying for a minute that this doesn't mean that we don't have a lot of cameras.’
Mr Gerrard confirmed he was surprised to learn of other research which suggested the London underground network houses as many as 11,000 cameras.
Writing in CCTV Image, Mr Gerrard added: ‘Eight years after the 4.2 million figure was first published, we now have research that indicates that the figure is less than half this guesstimate.
‘We also know that unless you make a particular point of visiting as many CCTV hotspot areas as you can, you are unlikely to be captured on CCTV 300 times a day.'
He admitted the latest figures were still estimates, but said they showed the number of CCTV cameras in the UK to be around 1.85 million.
‘And the real figure for the number of times the average person is likely to be 'caught' on CCTV in a day is less than 70 - and most of these will be at your workplace or fleeting glimpses by cameras located in shops’.
However, Isabella Sankey, director of policy at the campaign group Liberty, said the figures would do little to allay concerns about surveillance in Britain.
‘Who cares if there is one camera or 10 on their street if that one camera is pointing into your living room?’ she asked the Guardian.
‘Concerns about CCTV are not a simple numbers game; what's required is proper legal regulation and proportionate use.’
Read More: Dailymail
Wellcome Image Awards 2011
by Shazy | 4:36 AM in Health, Image Awards, library, London, medicine, picture, science, scientists, the Wellcome, twitter, Video, Wellcome Image Awards 2011, Wellcome Library, Wellcome Trust, winners |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011
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Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Striking microscope images nab awards
Colorful shots of a ruby-tailed wasp and a human chromosome bring mostly unseen objects to life.
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Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Wellcome Images is world's leading source of ...
Wellcome Images is the world's leading source of images of medicine and its history. The Wellcome Image Awards recognize the creators of the most informative, striking and technically excellent images among recent acquisitions. You can view all of the 2011 winners at http://www.wellcomeimageawards.org/. This photomicrograph shows an adult ruby-tailed wasp curled into a ball. The wasp was lit with two electronic flashes while imaging to highlight the natural iridescent colours on its body.![]() |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Photomicrograph of a mosquito from the Culex ...
Photomicrograph of a mosquito from the Culex genus. This image shows the whole body of an adult male. The sample is from a microscope slide created in the middle of the 20th century.![]() |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Cell division and gene expression
Cell division and gene expression in plant cells. Confocal micrograph showing the expression of different fluorescent proteins in the stem of a thale cress seedling (Arabidopsis thaliana). Arabidopsis was the first plant to have its entire genome sequenced and is an important model for studying plant biology. The middle of the image shows a region of high cell proliferation, which drives the growth and branching of the seedling.![]() |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Polarised photomicrograph showing rows of suckers
Polarised photomicrograph showing the rows of suckers on the foreleg of a male diving beetle. Commonly known as the great diving beetle, these are largest freshwater beetles in the UK. They have a large streamlined body that is dark brown in colour, with a yellow abdomen and yellow legs. This image was produced by passing light through coloured filters, a technique known as Rheinberg illumination.![]() |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Cavefish embryo at around five days post-fertilisation. ...
Cavefish embryo at around five days post-fertilisation. The embryo has been stained with an antibody against a calcium-binding protein (in green) to show different neuronal types and their processes in the nervous system. This staining also reveals taste buds, which are located around the mouth and along the body of the cavefish.![]() |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Honey Bee - False colour scanning electron micrograph ...
Honey Bee - False colour scanning electron micrograph of a Honey bee. The honeybee has a hairy thorax and segented abdomen, a pair of double wings and three pairs of segmented legs, each one with a different 'tool', designed for a specific functions to assist in the collection and transport of pollen.![]() |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Image of human chromosome in metaphase
Image of a human chromosome in metaphase. The colours in this image indicate the density of chromatin in the chromosome, like a heat map (red shows high density, blue low). A low density of chromatin indicates a high level of gene expression, and a high density indicates repression of gene expression.![]() |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
Moth wing scales
Moth wing scales. Scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the scales on the wing of a Madagascan moon moth, Argema mittrei. This moth is also known as the Comet moth, after its very long tail. The tail span is 15 cm and wing span 20 cm, making it one of the world's largest silk moths.![]() |
Wellcome Image Awards 2011 |
This colour-enhanced photomicrograph shows different ...
This colour-enhanced photomicrograph shows different species of bacteria that cause dental plaque - a colourless film that forms on teeth caused by the growth of bacterial colonies. The sample was removed from the mouth of a patient diagnosed with an aggressive form of gum disease.
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