[LINK] Supporting smart cities

Roger Clarke Roger.Clarke at xamax.com.au
Tue Feb 8 12:29:16 AEDT 2022


On 8/2/22 11:27 am, Stephen Loosley wrote:
> What a clever idea .. Problem: how best can the people whom organize
the maintenance etc of our suburban road networks keep an up- close and
regular watch (and recordings) of both sides of every street in your
local area?  Answer? Hi-res cameras mounted on every weekly rubbish
collection truck.

Agreed, it appears to have potential.

But it faces a lot of technical challenges.

(And I'm not entirely sure what IoT's got to do with it.  Nor 5G, given
that it can be uploaded in bulk at the base, with fewer security risks).

There are also considerable public risks associated with running
video-recording continually through the length and breadth of
densely-occupied territories.

StreetView required a great deal of careful thought, some of which
Google applied, some of it well, some not so well.  (Its unprosecuted
breaches of communications law by sniffing out every Wifi beacon in vast
tracts of the country, added greatly to the intrusiveness).

But that was a oncer, or maybe an occasional pass-by.

Garbage-trucks can generate weekly, and we're told high-res, imagery of,
well, prettymuch every urban street in the country.

What collection, storage, use, disclosure, retention, destruction, etc.
provisions apply?

What mitigation measures?

Law enforcement will be onto it in a flash, for scene-of-the-crime
before-and-afters.  And for intel.

And no doubt for co-option into the mass surveillance network of CCTV,
ANPR, Facial Recog, public transport, toll-road, air travel, etc.

And any rights provided to law enforcement agencies will be abused, by
the agencies, and by the individuals who exercise the agencies' powers.

And lots of less savoury organisations and individuals will be attracted
to this honey-pot imagery.

The standards of protections against third-party access to data
collections that are prevalent throughout government, outsourced
service-providers, and business generally, are disastrously low.

So what chances are there of such intensive data being constrained to
the (quite possibly already liberal) use and disclosure cases that the
scheme commences with??

_____________________


On 8/2/22 11:27 am, Stephen Loosley wrote:
> What a clever idea .. Problem: how best can the people whom organize the maintenance etc of our suburban road networks keep an up- close and regular watch (and recordings) of both sides of every street in your local area?  Answer? Hi-res cameras mounted on every weekly rubbish collection truck.
> 
> “IoT garbage trucks to detect road repairs in Swinburne-led 5G research project”
> 
> Garbage trucks featuring high-resolution cameras and GPS sensors will be used to create a map of assets that require maintenance by Brimbank City Council.
> 
> Written by Aimee Chanthadavong, Senior Journalist on February 7, 2022 | Topic: Internet of Things
> https://www.zdnet.com/article/iot-garbage-trucks-to-detect-road-repairs-in-swinburne-led-5g-research-project/<https://www.zdnet.com/article/iot-garbage-trucks-to-detect-road-repairs-in-swinburne-led-5g-research-project/D>
> 
> A network of garbage trucks that use 5G technology and Internet of Things sensors to detect local road repairs will be featured as part of a new research project between Swinburne University of Technology, Victoria's Brimbank City Council, and Optus to demonstrate how 5G can be used to support smart cities in Australia.
> 
> As part of the project, high-resolution cameras and GPS sensors will be attached to Brimbank's garbage trucks to collect 3D perception data at a rate of 900Mbps.
> 
> Data that is captured through the cameras and sensors will then be sent in real time to a cloud-based system to create a map of assets that require maintenance, such as road signs, bus shelters, or damaged roads.
> 
> Maintenance teams will be able to access the information directly on their phones and upload proof of maintenance then performed on the spot.
> 
> According to Swinburne, the project is expected to help the local council reduce the time it takes to identify, document, and fix issues, remove the need for costly manual reporting and audit, and save up to 50% of asset auditing costs.
> 
> "This innovative 5G-based project offers us a quicker and more efficient way to identify which assets need maintenance, and to get the information to the work crews. Simply put, this project will help Council respond faster to assets that need maintenance," Brimbank mayor Jasmine Nguyen said.
> 
> "Council is pleased to be working with Swinburne University and Optus on this ground-breaking project. Our project will also lead the way for other councils considering 5G based solutions for road and roadside asset condition monitoring."
> 
> The project is being supported by AU$1.18 million in funding from the federal government's 5G Innovation Initiative.
> 
> "We are delighted to be working with the forward-thinking Brimbank Council, and utilising Swinburne's leading capabilities and world-renowned expertise in Internet of Things and digital innovation to demonstrate a solution that can be used in cities across Australia and around the world," Swinburn's Factory of the Future and Digital Innovation Lab director Prakash Jayaraman said.
> 
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-- 
Roger Clarke                            mailto:Roger.Clarke at xamax.com.au
T: +61 2 6288 6916   http://www.xamax.com.au  http://www.rogerclarke.com

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Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Law            University of N.S.W.
Visiting Professor in Computer Science    Australian National University


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