Top 1184 Surveillance Cameras Quotes & Sayings - Page 3

Explore popular Surveillance Cameras quotes.
Last updated on April 16, 2025.
Surveillance legislation passed in good faith has been stretched well beyond its original purpose.
I think most Americans are against illegal surveillance of their emails and telephone calls by the government.
Preventing surveillance of millions of people at a time is totally within our ability. — © Alex Stamos
Preventing surveillance of millions of people at a time is totally within our ability.
A 24-hour police surveillance system will act as a deterrent for anti-social elements.
No system of mass surveillance has existed in any society that we know of to this point that has not been abused.
I want to help develop a visual and cultural vocabulary around surveillance.
Gaza itself is subject to constant aerial surveillance by drones and is rife with informers and collaborators with Israel.
It's every little girl's dream," she said. "Interpol surveillance. And kittens.
You have an always-expanding, omnipresent surveillance state that's constantly chipping away at the liberties and freedoms of law-abiding Americans.
By "trampling upon the helpless abroad" with unchecked surveillance, Americans have learned, "by a natural process, to endure with apathy the like at home."
I have been placed under surveillance, and I can't take a step without it being known to the Polish minister of internal affairs.
What would the infrastructure of the Internet look like if mass surveillance wasn't its business model?
In digital era, privacy must be a priority. Is it just me, or is secret blanket surveillance obscenely outrageous? — © Al Gore
In digital era, privacy must be a priority. Is it just me, or is secret blanket surveillance obscenely outrageous?
Insane means fewer cameras!
Suspicionless surveillance does not become okay simply because it's only victimizing 95% of the world instead of 100%.
There's still a lot of things you can legitimately do to make America safe through electronic surveillance.
The passed Pawn is a criminal, who should be kept under lock and key. Mild measures, such as police surveillance, are not sufficient
I'm not comfortable around cameras.
I'm just as intrigued by acting as ever. It's an ongoing process. There's no arrival. There's no point at which you say "Oh, OK, done it, got it." It just doesn't happen. And that's true of any creative endeavor. For me, it's just a lifelong interest. I'm very much interested in the craft. I started by doing plays and it took me a long time to feel comfortable doing movies, working with cameras. I felt like I was a theater actress pretending that I was a movie actress for quite a while. Now, I just love the process of working with cameras and being on a set and trying to put a film together.
We are rapidly entering the age of no privacy, where everyone is open to surveillance at all times; where there are no secrets from government.
The third person narrator, instead of being omniscient, is like a constantly running surveillance tape.
We have put over £2bn in the last three years into counter-terrorism and we are developing the electronic border surveillance and identity cards
A crucial question is how to balance surveillance with privacy and keeping Americans safe.
I have used mass surveillance to target people, so I do know how it works.
People are starting to be very skeptical of the Facebook algorithm and all kinds of data surveillance.
One thing that is very different technically is that you don't get a lot of coverage in television. Not like you do on a film. I know we don't have time for separate set-ups, so I will design a scene where I'm hiding multiple cameras within that set-up. That way, if I don't have time to do five set-ups, I can do four cameras in one set-up. It's a different kind of approach for that. For the most part, a lot of television, in a visual sense, lacks time for the atmosphere and putting you in a place.
Our movements and feelings are constantly monitored, because surveillance is the business model of the digital age.
In America, surveillance has always played an outsized role in the relationship between creditors and debtors.
I think that has a lot of dangers, as does government surveillance, which is way too high.
I don't think there's anything, any threat out there today that anyone can point to, that justifies placing an entire population under mass surveillance.
It seems to limit you; when you're working in an office, you're a creature in a small cell under somebody's supervision and surveillance.
The NSA routinely lies in response to congressional inquiries about the scope of surveillance in America.
If you are concerned you are the victim of illegal corporate surveillance, you should seek specialist - and independent - legal advice at once.
Research In Motion, the owner of BlackBerry, has been asked by a range of governments to comply with surveillance requirements.
We're not cameras, we're artists.
Cameras aren't guns. They can't really hurt you.
A regime which combines perpetual surveillance with total indulgence is hardly conducive to healthy development.
Like any extraordinary power, surveillance provides temptations for abuse, such as tracking political opponents and journalists. — © Ari Melber
Like any extraordinary power, surveillance provides temptations for abuse, such as tracking political opponents and journalists.
Although the organizing logic of our nation's surveillance apparatus is invisibility and secrecy, its operations occupy the physical world.
In the United States, there hasn't been much legislative change on the surveillance issue, although there are some tepid proposals.
I'm in front of cameras a lot; I'm used to it.
When the New York Times revealed the warrantless surveillance of voice calls, in December 2005, the telephone companies got nervous.
Cameras in the courtroom is a great idea.
I don't have a problem with stepped-up surveillance as long as we follow the rule of law.
Everyone, especially minorities of race and ethnicity, now live under a surveillance panoptican.
If I'm shooting actually a live-action movie and I feel like I can get the shots that I need with the existing 3D cameras, then I see there is no reason to not use those-to not shoot it in 3D. But there are limitations to the 3D cameras in terms of the amount of them, in terms of the size of them, in terms of where you can actually shoot them. There are definitely limitations so you have to weigh the costs. And you have to weigh also what ultimately what creatively you want to get.
You can't assume any place you go is private because the means of surveillance are becoming so affordable and so invisible.
Cameras intrigued me. — © Garry Winogrand
Cameras intrigued me.
With the growing availability of commoditized encryption, it is becoming easier for common criminals to communicate beyond the reach of traditional surveillance.
Surveillance changes history. We know this through examples of corrupt presidents like Nixon.
WhatsApp has a consistent history - from zero encryption at its inception to a succession of security issues strangely suitable for surveillance purposes.
The Internet is the most liberating tool for humanity ever invented, and also the best for surveillance. It's not one or the other. It's both.
The hospital room of a cabinet official is exactly the type of target ripe for surveillance by a foreign power.
Funny, for all surveillance, Osama bin Laden is still free?and we're not. Guess who's winning the "war on terror?
Cameras get in the way of seeing.
One thing Telegram does is make mass surveillance impossible.
If we don't do anything, if we go along with the status quo, we are going to have a mass surveillance world.
All the cameras shifted from the players to me.
The nature of the government's surveillance on me and my family is forensically proven and not subject to legitimate question.
With technology tracking us everywhere we go, 'cosplay' might become our best defense against surveillance.
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