CCTV Network Tracks Getaway Car 434
An anonymous reader writes "The BBC is reporting that a 'pioneering number plate recognition system in Bradford played a vital role in the arrests of six suspects' after the murder of a Policewoman - within minutes of Friday's shootings, police were using the system to track the suspected getaway car." From the article: "When a car is entered on the system it will 'ping' whenever it passes one of our cameras, which makes it a lot easier to track than waiting for a patrol car to spot it."
You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:3, Funny)
Citizen kentrel anteposting approved fullwise suggestion contained thisposting doubleplus ridiculous verging crimethink
not familiar with the quote- but it must be old (Score:2)
darkness.. pfft.
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:4, Interesting)
Its a lot easier to rob a bank and flee the country when the police all go after your "Getaway Car" in London while you take the train to Calais.
It's also a lot easier to find those pesky activists that don't like cameras everywhere.
Or round up undesirables for imprisonment.
Or single out your rival.
Or stalk your ex.
Or find a diplomat's motorcade.
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:4, Insightful)
But there's that "at what price?" question just hanging there with these little privacy invasions like a noose around its neck. It's great that this murdered woman's killers were caught. But at the price of being constantly watched, constantly scanned, for the rest of my life? No, thank you.
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:5, Insightful)
What you are seeing here has nothing to do with the merits of the system. It has something to do with typical newsmanagement by Tony Bliar cronies. Similar to the one they tried on the "Good day to Burry Bad News (9/11)". They want to push this system as a replacement for speed cameras with the difference that speed will be checked every 400m, not in specific locations. Further to this you have the transport secretary which is waiting in the wings to use the same network for charging per road use.
The only problem - the road users are just a few inches short of wanting to lynch 'em both. So what do you do in this case - get good publicity. And this all this is about. And using the death of a mother with 4 kids in the line of duty for this is as appaling as it can get.
By the way who is the criminal idiot who sent two unarmed, untrained women without body armour to investigate a reported armed robbery in progress?
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:3, Informative)
The police officers were the nearest to a reported incident at a private currency exchange for Pakistani businessmen and their families. There was no way of the owners to indicate that this was an armed robbery although the location was a frequency location for armed raids due to the large sums of money being exchanged. The officers had basic body armour - enough
Parent post is full of misinformation (Score:5, Informative)
According to press reports, the two police officers were attending a report of a disturbance. There was no information that this was an armed robbery in progress, and the police women just happened to be the closest officers. Please remember that most city policing in Britain is done by cops on foot walking the streets with inimate knowledge of their beat area; not by remote seeming individuals running around in cars. For example, in the division that I last worked, we had 29 foot patrols and 4 vehicle patrols - which isn't to say that there aren't other vehicles around (traffic division cars, tactical patrol group, special patrol group, vice, Criminal Investigation, etc.)
Gun crimes are rare in Britain - there is no legal way for any individual to own a gun and there are stiff penalties (like jail) just for possession. Having a gun is considered a more serious crime than having drugs. If a police officer suspects that they may be faced by a person with a gun they have only to use their radio and armed officers will be on their way within seconds - literally. Guns are available at all police stations, and many (perhaps most these days) police officers are trained in using them.
In five years as a police officer, including over 1,000 arrests, I was never faced by anyone with a gun, and I can only recall a handful of times that officers had to call for backup because of suspected gun use. However, I was faced by knive wielding people six times and five times I disarmed them without injury to either of us. The first time I was faced by a man with a knife I wasn't quick enough and received a cut to the back of my hand that needed ten stitches, and the knife wielder received six years in prison.
According to all press reports, the policewomen involved in this incident did have body armor. However, body armor doesn't stop all bullet types, and there are bullet types specifically designed to penetrate such armor. The principle reason that most officers wear body armor is to protect themselves from knives, a much bigger threat than guns. Of course, this doesn't apply to all officers, those who carry guns (diplomatic protection group, anti-terrorist group, special patrol group, royal family protection officers, etc.) expect to face guns and wear appropriate protection.
Police work can never be totally safe. In Britain approximately one officer a year dies in the line of duty. However, the most common cause of death is being run over by a vehicle, deliberately or accidentally. Over the last 30 years, 12 officers have died to gunfire, and three of those were in a single incident in London.
British police value the fact they are generally unarmed. It makes the general public feel less intimidated by officers, and there is a general sense of public cooperation with the police that far exceeds that of countries where the police are armed. There have been many strident calls to routinely arm the British police, but very few of these calls have been from police officers. I think that arming British police would fundementally change the way that the British police interact with the public and cause more incidents (such as the case where over-eager officers shot and killed a suspected terrorist in the London underground, and subsequently found out that the man was merely an electrician on his way to work with no terrorist connections at all.) It would also make criminals more eager to carry guns and more willing to use them.
These two policewomen were just unlucky. A routine incident turned deadly. It happens, but it's pretty infrequent. Rules should not be based on very rare incidents.
The parent post asks why the car was allowed to travel all the way from Bradford to London. I don't know, but a number of possibilities come to mind. The most likely reason in my mind is that there was not a suitable location to isolate and take the
Re:Parent post is full of misinformation (Score:5, Insightful)
"Important when the populace is entirely unarmed and at their mercy"
Cop has no gun: Citzen has no gun - it's a decent balance of power, no?
Seriously, I see a lot of this kind of sniping, but there doesn't seem to be any kind of logic behind it.
Say you're in a state where open or even concealed carry is legal, you're in a confrontation with a cop and you decide it's going badly, so you draw on him/her. What happens now?
You've got the full attention of the criminal justice system focussed on you. If captured and tried, you can obviously expect the DA to be calling for the harshest possible sentence against a merciless mad-dog killer...
Me, I prefer a society where as few people as possible have access to firearms.
I'd like to own a weapon, try my hand at the range (which I haven't done since the Air Training Corps many moons ago). OTOH, I'd be scared shitless if my crazy neighbour had similar easy access to deadly ranged weapons.
That's the crux of it: I'd like to own a weapon. I'd absolutely hate to feel I needed to own one.
T&K.
Re:Parent post is full of misinformation (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:5, Insightful)
I know of suspicious/vindictive/controlling/abusive people who if they had the power to see where their spouse/ex-spouse/SO would certainly abuse the priviledge by doing so.
I find it hard to believe that buddies of buddies wouldn't use something like this to say "hey, keep an eye on my SO, I've got to be on stake-out for the next few nights"
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:2)
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:3, Insightful)
I would say these are good questions to ask. Their isn't a simple good or bad answer to this. It does need to be discussed.
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:3, Insightful)
A large number of both UK and US citizens have posted that they prefer a non-gun possessing police force, including a large number of police, some from Bradford where this happened.
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps if/when they extend it to track all vehicles as a matter of course, I'll be worried about some Orwellian nightmare the way you seem to imply I should be now. Maybe if I knew how to drive and owned a car it'd be more of a worry to me now, I can't really say.
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:4, Insightful)
1) What makes you think they aren't?
2) What makes you think you'll be able to stop them then?
3) Do you think its impossible that some 'security agent' monitoring these cameras, doesnt want you going out with his ex wife and abuses the system?
If they put cameras everywhere, everyone should have access to those cameras. Not a select few as it is currently. Anything else is 'us' against 'them' (police/state), and youd best be sure which side your on.
"What is now real was once only imagined..."
Guess that means you should care then
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:2)
What makes you think it doesn't. With the police shooting people "just in case they're criminals", why wouldn't the police record every movement of every person all the time.
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:2, Informative)
Sigh why was he modded informative (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sigh why was he modded informative (Score:2)
Re:Sigh why was he modded informative (Score:2)
Re:Sigh why was he modded informative (Score:2)
Re:Sigh why was he modded informative (Score:3, Funny)
That was a major stumbling block for law enforcement, until they realized they could secretly train the new generation of drug dogs to detect gasoline. ;)
Re:Sigh why was he modded informative (Score:2, Insightful)
Terrorist don't wear seatbelts! (Score:4, Informative)
Nope sorry. Thanks to the combination of the seat belt law and the patriot act police can now pull you over for not wearing a seat belt and immediately search your vehicle. No warrent needed. Because as we all know, terrorist don't wear seatbelts. (In the US)
-Rick
Re:Terrorist don't wear seatbelts! (Score:2)
Only in places where seat belt use is a primary crime. LOTS of states, that isn't the case. They can ticket you, after stopping you for something else, but they can't make the initial stop based soley on non-seatbelt use.
Re:Terrorist don't wear seatbelts! (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure, but they can use virtually ANY excuse to pull you over if they see/think that you don't have it on. Oops, that car weaved a little to the left, better pull them over type of thing. The difference between a primary/seconday crime is really how convenient it is for the police to enforce it (or how much of a cover story they need...)
In other words, the difference between primary and secondary traffic infractions is rather meaningless. About as usefu
Re:Sigh why was he modded informative (Score:5, Informative)
In summary:
1) Keep Your Private Items Out of View
2) Be Courteous & Non-Confrontational
3) Just Say "No" to Warrantless Searches
4) Determine if You Can Leave
5) Do Not Answer Questions without Your Attorney Present
6) Do Not Physically Resist
Some of this really goes to "No good deed goes unpunished". Even if you have nothing to hide and did nothing wrong doesn't mean you should roll over and expose your belly.
Re:You live in a police state: Rejoice! (Score:2)
I for one (Score:3, Funny)
Privacy? They killed a policewoman. let em hang. whoops... do they do that in Britain?
Re:I for one (Score:3, Interesting)
No ... because 12 out of the last 13 people hung later turned out to be innocent.
A good portion of the people murdered in Britian have been murdered by police: google "table leg" or "Menezes". I believe in the USA 75% of police shot are either shot with their own gun or by another policeman, so arming the police is not the answer either.
Re:I for one (Score:2)
Bollocks. A "good portion of the people murdered in Britain"? And you cite two examples? Both examples caused absolute outcry here, although the first one polarised opinion as opposed to the universal condemnation and shock caused by the second.
I don't know the count of people murdered in this country last year, but sad to say it's likely to be an awful lot higher than two. The police have mad
Re:I for one (Score:2)
1 in 5 is a lot smaller than 75% (although that's killed, not shot).
Re:I for one (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the last person shot was innocent too.
Re:I for one (Score:2)
Those two causes don't have dick to do with anything. Police officers are most likely shooting in self defense or in defense of the public. People shot by their own guns could be criminals who were disarmed and then shot by their would-be victims. Might as well have said "50% of the people run over by cars were run over in their driveways" and then argue for a b
Re:I for one (Score:2)
Of the 568 US law enforcement officers killed with a firearm between 1994 and 2003, 51, or 9.0%, were killed with their own weapon.
In addition, 26 officers were killed by friendly fire (including 6 training accidents and 4 non-suicide self-inflicted deaths) out of a total of 697 accidental on-duty deaths.
So, in total, we have 26+51=78 officers shot either (a) by assailants, with their own guns, or (b) accidentally by themselves or another officer, out of 594
yeah well.... (Score:5, Funny)
So that's OK (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So that's OK (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know. Have you deleted your Peer-to-Peer filesharing programs yet?
Re:So that's OK (Score:2)
Re:So that's OK (Score:2)
So sophisticated... (Score:5, Informative)
For a pioneering system, this sounds very well integrated or they are just using the bad news to give a reason for the cameras. It was only last week we heard about this for the first time.
I don't like living in the UK. Big brother really is watching us
(Though I am very pleased they caught these crooks in this instance, I still don't see why a criminal would go up north, rob a store then flee to the biggest city in the country. Don't these people think about lying low?)
Re:So sophisticated... (Score:2)
211 Miles??? (Score:3, Interesting)
1: Commit crime
2: Drive to least favorite relative's house
2: Loan car to (for me anyway) sister-in-law, who borrows everything & returns nothing, for vacation trip
3: Laugh for a very long time while she tries to prove she's innocent.
2 cents,
Queen B
Re:211 Miles??? (Score:2)
3: Loan car to (for me anyway) sister-in-law, who borrows everything & returns nothing, for vacation trip
4: Laugh for a very long time while she tries to prove she's innocent.
5: cops come to see you once sister-in-law starts pointing fingers
6: witness to the crime ID's you, accomplices rat you out for lighter sentences, hilarity ensues
License plates don't tell who's driving, but anything that leads them to your door is probably gonna get yo
Re:So sophisticated... (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting, but too many unknowns (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Interesting, but too many unknowns (Score:2)
But yes, there's nothing to stop a crook putting false plates on a car involved in a crime, which I'm sure many will do. Perhaps the system will pick up the fact that the plates are not the right ones though?
Re:Interesting, but too many unknowns (Score:2)
Are you kidding? you can't drive a car with no plates in the UK unless you are the Queen. You would be stopped within two blocks, and charged with zillions of offences. Cars are plated before they leave the dealers.
Even worse (Score:2)
Re:Interesting, but too many unknowns (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Interesting, but too many unknowns (Score:2)
Being the only car on the road with no plates is pretty conspicuous. The only real way of evading this system would be to change the plate every mile or so, maybe some kind of OLED plate that you can change automatically while moving.
This is dangerous and scary (Score:5, Funny)
Time get out my James Bondesque... (Score:2)
I wonder how long it will keep records? Or would such a system look for patterns of behavior, like c
Yes, a crisitunity (Score:2)
Re:Yes, a crisitunity (Score:2)
Obligatory Monty Python Reference (Score:3, Funny)
Ah yes. The machine that goes 'ping'!
Don't touch it!! (Score:5, Funny)
1) It's the machine that goes Ping!
2) What?
1) We don't know what it does, it just goes "Ping" every now and again and we are scared to turn it off.
The machine that goes beep (Score:2)
Violation of Civil Liberties! (Score:2)
The society we live in these days...
Re:Violation of Civil Liberties! (Score:5, Informative)
In the UK, they can take a DNA sample from an arrested suspect, and keep that data indefinitely even if the suspect is subsequently acquitted or not even charged. This has already been tested and found legal by the courts.
This is why I use.... (Score:4, Interesting)
This is the same stuff... (Score:2)
Re:This is why I use.... (Score:2)
It probably also makes the plate an even better target for LIDAR. Since both LIDAR and these traffic cameras use infra-red, I'd like to see a paint that was opaquely black (absorbant) to IR but clear in the visible spectrum.
Secure Beneath the Watchful Eyes (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Secure Beneath the Watchful Eyes (Score:2)
Re:Secure Beneath the Watchful Eyes (Score:2)
Over here, you'd be a nice friendly picture of a cheery person with a headset watching a screen, like in the car insurance commercials.
For the paranoid... (Score:2)
I am not affiliated with this company in any way.
Los Angeles use a similar system (Score:5, Informative)
Some guy goes to a meeting with his probation officer, and parks in front of a squad car with the plate recognition equipment in it. The system pings his ride - which was stolen.
Pretty convenient for the cops.
it doesn't fully explain how the police use it (Score:5, Insightful)
1) input a number plate that they want to track and it pings every time they pass a camera, discarding records of number plates which aren't the ones being tracked (i.e. recognise plate, check against list of plates being looked for, if it's not on the list, discard)
2) record every number plate and look through the logs to look when a particular one passed a particular camera, then keeping the logs until forever.
3) some sort of hybrid, like keeping the logs for 24 hours to see what happened earlier in the day, but killing them after that. (like some sort of caching system)
No1 I'd just about support (so long as there were adequate safeguards to make sure that it was only used to track suspects (not potential suspects) and I'd just about stretch to No3 so long as the logs really were being killed.
No2, however, is a BIG no-no. Automated camera systems to track the movements of every car in the country and then keep that on a permanent record are VERY bad (although I suspect that is what happens). When did spending a vast sum on public money on an automated system to track the car-using public go through parliament?
And another thing, where do the police get the idea that it's a given that they can 'deny the use of the roads to criminals'? take this very case, right now these people are SUSPECTS they haven't even been charged, as such they aren't 'criminals'. Someone explain why being a suspect means that you're no longer entitled to use the roads without being tracked? They'll be wanting tracking bugs in shoes next 'to deny criminals use of their feet'
Re:it doesn't fully explain how the police use it (Score:2)
The suspects they have picked up for this murder will be getting some pretty serious attention - the killing of a policeman in the UK is pretty rare, a policewoman rarer still. They will use everything they have to get someone charged.
Not bad at all (Score:5, Interesting)
You are anthropomorphizing the data (I refuse to make the obvious joke). The data itself is not bad or good. The data is just data, another tool.
What is bad or good is the procedures by which this data is accessed, the uses to which it is put.
The real question is - is this tool too powerful to exist? I do not think so as long as there is oversight in it's use, because it can do a lot of real good - as in the case of the killers being caught, or (potentially) a vast reduction in stolen cars.
People like to argue that the genie is out of the bottle in regards to filesharing. Well, the genie of pervasive monitoring is so close to out as to make no difference. So we as humanity must adjust and figure out how we are to live with this very powerful tool, and make it serve us instead of fearing it just as the RIAA and ilk must figure how to live in a world when anything can be copied. This situation may seem dissimilar but it is not; something you do not wish to happen is becoming prevalent so instead of a futile battle to stop what cannot be stopped, figure out what leverage you have to control its use.
Some people also claim the UK is now a "Police State". They are mistaken; the difference between a police state and this is that in a Police State is that you are always being WATCHED (or be made to think you are). In the case of the modern UK your public actions are constantly being RECORDED. There is a huge difference between activity and passivity.
If a system is passive and takes no action without direction, if a person in order to direct a system to take action has oversight and rules binding what they may do, then I am generally OK with that system. A network of passive cameras that can be used to track fleeing thugs or stolen cars? Grand. A network of cameras that automatically issues tickets without intervention? Now that pisses me off and I think is a serious misuse of the power granted to the government. The sooner people see the difference the sooner they can push for oversight and reasonable use of the cameras.
Having read David Brin I would argue that any feed from a public camera also be publically accessible. When anyone can watch anyone else, when the police as well as citizens are bothe being recorded in public - then there is equal footing.
Now that takes all the fun out of..... (Score:2)
Fake plates (Score:5, Interesting)
If you are going to commit a crime, make sure you pick up a 10-pack of fake plates and switch them out randomly during your arrival and your getaway. Even better if the fakes use valid numbers off other vehicles in the same vicinity giving the coppers two nearby "pings" to choose from. They don't even have to be high-quality fakes, just enough to fool the cameras and anyone else looking at them from a distance.
So now the criminals know. (Score:3, Insightful)
We end up with a system that spies upon and punishes the law abiding citizens that make accidental mistakes, whilst letting the professional criminals find an easy loophole. Its good to see my tax money finding new and creative ways to rape me of my income.
Oh boo-hoo (Score:2)
To wit, folks, the license plate on the car belongs to the government. They're not tracking YOU, they're tracking their property.
Any crook truly determined to elude the police would just peel the layers of contact paper off of their car, each time they were spotted.
Tall Blond Man (Score:5, Insightful)
"...because when looked at closely enough, every man's life is suspicious".
Individually, any of these systems may appear to do good things in individual cases. And the arguments for them always center around certain immediate benefits without considering the wider picture. The bigger truth is that such systems lead to a society full of anxiety, fear, and guilt, with arbitrary and random enforcement of the rules. There's a word for such conditions - the word is "despotism".
One tiny little problem... (Score:3, Informative)
No proof of registration is needed to make up a plate, as there are perfectly valid reasons for having spare plates. Trailers and caravans don't have their own registration - they display the number plate of the vehicle towing them. So you might very well have a couple of spare plates for your main towing car lying around that you can use.
Even the dumbest of criminals will work around that problem before too long. Get spare false plates made up. Attach the false plates to the car using sticky-backed velcro or something similar. Immediately after you've carried out your robbery / murder / kidnap / etc. , duck into a car-park, rip the spare plates off, and drive away at a steady restrained place, happy in the knowledge that the cops won't be actually out looking for you, they'll be replying on Big Brother to spot your car.
Britain is unfortunately becoming a surveillance society. In addition to the number of speed cameras dotted around the country (they outnumber trees in some areas) almost every town centre is covered by CCTV. The latest plan, as referenced in TFA, wants to place cameras every 400 metres on trunk roads and motorways. No doubt it will be described by Bliar & cronies as a way to fight terrorism and crack down on crime; in effect, it will be a way for the police to massively increase their revenue by being able to monitor your speed constantly, and automatically ping you should exceed the limit. They'll then introduce per-mile road charges, motorway tolls, etc. on the back of the technology.
It really makes me very glad I left that country.
Public Eye (Score:4, Insightful)
And we've got to apply that consistency to the police and government employees themselves. Public employees should be monitored, even if those records are available only to duly authorized government overseers. Every official should be recorded for review. Including police officers. The police especially would benefit from being monitored, if we replaced their "paperwork" to just fast-forwarding video with voice annotations that are transcribed. Then they can spend more time dealing with criminals and each other than with forms and bureaucracy. And their "witness" roles would all produce much more accessible evidence to be used by the rest of the justice system. Rather than having to believe an officer's "word", which gradually undermines its credibility, police videos would make it faster, cheaper, easier and more reliable to administer justice. And budget-strapped precincts could auction the bloopers to C.O.P.S. shows.
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:2)
chicken or egg? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:2)
Oi! We've only had about four or five shootings this year so far... It's all stabbings these days.
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:5, Insightful)
Ummm, yeah. By eliminating data you don't like, you can make statistics say whatever you like. Congratulations.
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:5, Funny)
would that be people with guns?
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:2)
Ah yes, my wife and child can get blown away by a legal semi-automatic, but Heaven forbid that someone take the criminals picture that may violate their rights. But at least the police's inability to know who did it means my family got to live free before their heads were blown off.
And for the people who are upset that someone would be constantly watching them, get a grip. You're just not that important.
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe it's just us Brits that see the advantage.
Simon.
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:3, Insightful)
Second, most places in the US with very high proliferation of firearms have much lower crime rates than England.
Neither of which explains why there are ~11,000 fatal shootings in the US per year, and only ~35 in the UK. This is using the OP's figures, I haven't looked it up, but I do know it's a major news event when someone gets shot
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:4, Interesting)
Care to back the Australia comment up with some meaningful information? And the England one too.
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:2)
Nearly everyone I know owns at least on gun, legally.
Re:Shooting?? I thought the UK had strict gun cont (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:So many ways to get around??? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:For a min I thought we were on China again (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Plates (Score:2)
Re:Plates (Score:2)
Re:Reflective license plates?? (Score:4, Interesting)
Numerous methods of speed camera avoidance have been tested: hairspray, cling film (PVC film), refraction grid plate covers, etc. Absolutely none of them work.
However, my dad did come up with a couple of really good ideas to counter them. As the use of radar jammers (as opposed to detectors) is illegal, you need to disrupt the photo process. The cameras that use white flashes would be easiest to disrupt. Mount a photographic slave flash trigger above the numberplate, connected and adjacent to two fast-charging flash guns. Speed camera flashes, slave trigger fires and the two numberplate flash guns go off. Result: one completely over-exposed photo with the number plate hopefully obscured by a white smear.
For the infra-red cameras, drill a few holes at random in the plate and mount a number of high-intensity infra-red LEDs in the holes. Not sure how effective this would be, but it would certainly make life a bit more difficult for the people looking at the pics.