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News Archive

CCTV Talks

by Msecadm4921

Sicura Systems attended the recent Global MSC Security conference in Bristol where Ian Cook, the company’s VAR Sales Account Manager, addressed delegates on the subject of the pending Protection of Freedoms Bill and its likely effect on public space CCTV.

Mr Cook took as his starting point the recent Gerrard/Thompson figures which suggest that six per cent of the UK’s CCTV cameras are on buses and trains while 2pc are in town and city centres. This leaves 92pc or 1.7 million cameras in private ownership, notably at retail outlets, leisure destinations and petrol forecourts.

Ian told delegates that the low proportion of overall camera numbers in street-facing civic locations does much to defuse recent lobbying by Liberty and other pressure groups. He then speculated that with the advent of megapixel and HD, camera numbers may begin to fall because if image quality improves, urban planners, architects and local authorities will realise that fewer units are likely to give the same or better coverage.

As the optical aspects of CCTV develop, accompanying management systems are also improving apace. Mr Cook outlined the functionality of Sicura Systems’ VMS solution, DigiLive, which is used within mission-critical applications requiring instant access to digital content 24/7/365.

DigiLive has the capability of recording and viewing each camera stream in the format presented to the system, meaning that high-quality source feeds such as 720p HD can be captured, stored, replayed and exported in HD quality. This allows precise, rapid retrieval when an incident needs to be reviewed. Footage is shown to the operator in relevant time, date and categorised order, so that events can be evaluated and a recording given to third parties such as police and judicial authorities.

Some 90 delegates attended the event at the Bristol Marriott Royal Hotel, the highlight being a ‘Question Time’ session for which panellists included Bill Butler of the Security Industry Association, Dr Peter Fussey of the University of Essex and Paul Mackie of CameraWatch.