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Ben Nadel at Scotch On The Rock (SOTR) 2010 (London) with: John Whish and Kev McCabe
Ben Nadel at Scotch On The Rock (SOTR) 2010 (London) with: John Whish Kev McCabe

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We must advocate for federal laws that require manufacturers to get warrants before handing footage to police. We must demand "privacy by design"—on-device AI processing rather than cloud uploading, and mandatory encryption. And individually, we must calibrate our own tolerance for risk.

In the last decade, the home security camera has undergone a radical transformation. What was once a grainy, wired fixture reserved for the mansions of the wealthy or the high-security back offices of convenience stores is now a sleek, 4K, AI-driven puck that sits on your kitchen counter. With prices dropping below $30 and installation requiring no more than a Wi-Fi password, these devices have become a staple of modern life. We must advocate for federal laws that require

If your intent is to monitor your spouse’s arrival times, record the nanny’s every word without her knowledge, or build a dossier on the "suspicious" teenagers next door, the technology will enable your paranoia—and likely break the law. In the last decade, the home security camera

The safest home is not necessarily the one with the most cameras. It is the one where the inhabitants feel secure, respected, and free. Before you screw that baseplate into the siding, look through the lens. Ask yourself: Are you protecting your home, or are you just building a panopticon? If your intent is to monitor your spouse’s

Is a $20 discount on a cloud plan worth the peace of mind of your family’s daily habits being analyzed by a server in a foreign country? Is catching a porch pirate worth alienating a neighbor who feels spied upon?

The camera is a tool. It is not a moral actor. The privacy risk is not inherent to the lens; it is inherent to the human holding the phone notification. We cannot put the genie back in the bottle. Cheap, high-quality surveillance is here to stay. The challenge of the next decade will not be if we use cameras, but how we manage their spillover.

If your intent is to verify the garage door is closed and see who rings the bell, you can build a privacy-friendly system.

I believe in love. I believe in compassion. I believe in human rights. I believe that we can afford to give more of these gifts to the world around us because it costs us nothing to be decent and kind and understanding. And, I want you to know that when you land on this site, you are accepted for who you are, no matter how you identify, what truths you live, or whatever kind of goofy shit makes you feel alive! Rock on with your bad self!
Ben Nadel
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