The technology of surveillance equipment is continuing to
advance at a very rapid pace. As a result surveillance
equipment has become almost ubiquitous in retail stores,
public schools, gas stations, and airport terminals all
across the United States. There is a wide range of
surveillance technology that is available on the market.
Surveillance equipment ranges from wiretapping phone and
internet based equipment to high tech facial feature
recognition computer software known as biometrics.
Surveillance equipment makes the world infinitely more
manageable for people who need to protect their belongings
and protect people and make its far more difficult for
people who actually want to commit crime. As more of the
high-tech surveillance equipment becomes more and more
easily available to the general public and small business
owners, more and more people will reap the benefits.
The basic concept that underpins a piece of
surveillance-equipment is one of 'you will be seen'. The
gist of it is that criminals may well think twice about
committing a crime if they think they might be seen,
identified and then found later on and be charged with a
crime. Although it is unlikely that everything can be caught
on surveillance camera at one time, on the occasions when
surveillance does pick up activity, it does provide enormous
help to security and police in identifying the offenders.
These days the more advanced surveillance equipment
operates in the same way in an effort prevent crime from
occurring, so it has not veered from its original intent.
Indeed many small businesses decide to install dummy cameras
that don't actually record anything, indeed don't even turn
on, but act more as a preventative measure for potential
offenders.
One of the main reasons for the establishment of
surveillance equipment is to prevent the theft of
merchandise from stores and warehouses. Usually offenders
come from outside the company and so the theft can be caught
on tape and referred to the police. But on occasion the
offender will actually come from within the company and then
employee policy needs to be implemented. Upon discovering
the internal offender that employee will usually find
themselves without a job.
Apart from the examples outlined earlier, shopping malls,
parking garages, office buildings, and warehouses and
financial institutions all now commonly use video based
surveillance equipment in order to protect their wares and
to also to limit the costly losses incurred by dishonest
employees. Major department stores who have high internal
theft rates use these video surveillance systems to actively
prosecute thieving employees.
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About The Author
Julianna Munro is the owner of First Surveillance
which is a premier source of information about
Surveillance. For more information, go to: http://firstsurveillance.com
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This article was posted on August 14, 2005