The difference to me is that when your presence was merely recorded on video, it required the manual labor of humans to search for your face in the recording. This isn't something that is likely to happen unless authorities are looking for you in particular for some actual reason.
Now with it all automated, it just takes running some scripts on a computer system to locate your face from any number of sources, so people who are not particularly under suspicion for anything will have their whereabouts identified automatically just as if they were actual suspects.
Same story with automatic license plates readers. Manual searching for a license plate is so time-consuming that it's unlikely to get done without cause. With automatic systems, records can be kept of every car that passes through a monitored intersection, whether if the car or driver is of actual interest or not.
That particular arbitrary line in the sand seems mighty.. well.. arbitrary. The data is being collected either way, but it only becomes objectionable because a computer is involved? On what grounds?
I think it's a pretty big difference, going from labor-intensive manual inspection of data to fully automated inspection of data, opening up everyone within few of the camera to being automatically tracked.
It's not the same thing that's always been done, except now it's being done with a computer. It's the same thing that's always been done, except now it's being done for everyone, rather than for just a few select individuals of interest. It doesn't really matter that a computer is involved; it's the scope of the surveillance that is disconcerting. If huge numbers of humans were hired to track everyone manually, that would also be disconcerting.
Who cares? I'm not entirely sure. And I guess that's sort of the point. This level of surveillance has, in my opinion, surpassed what most of society is ready for. I don't think that most people have a good grasp on what's going on, or what impact it will / could have on their lives.
If arbitrary companies and government agencies can know my whereabouts at all times, should this have any impact to how I live my life? It's a question that society at large has never had to really answer before.
Are you seriously implying that you see no difference between "thou shalt not kill" and "thou shalt not analyze images of public places with anything more complicated than an abacus" ??
Nice Strawman, but murder is not the only other law on the books
We have regulations for how tall your grass shall be, what color you can paint your home, how many dogs you are allowed to have etc etc etc etc.... 1000's of aribirary rules and regulations for society.
For businesses there are even more, things like handicapped parking, bathrooms, depending on the type of business the hours or days you are allowed to be open, etc etc etc 10's of thousands of rules arbitraly defined as to what a business can and can not do
This is more akin to regulations around either medical records, or finical records both have regulations around how the data can be stored, and how the business can use it.
The public is better off with reasonable restrictions on the mass collection of data. It is a utilitarian solution. What grounds are there to require wearing a seatbelt when driving a car?
Now with it all automated, it just takes running some scripts on a computer system to locate your face from any number of sources, so people who are not particularly under suspicion for anything will have their whereabouts identified automatically just as if they were actual suspects.
Same story with automatic license plates readers. Manual searching for a license plate is so time-consuming that it's unlikely to get done without cause. With automatic systems, records can be kept of every car that passes through a monitored intersection, whether if the car or driver is of actual interest or not.