Being Watched: Embedding Ethics in Public Cameras

 

Cities are adopting camera technologies, including public video cameras and sensors, that use AI to process visual data with the promise of improving services, enhancing management capabilities, and lowering costs. However, privacy is a core challenge to using the data, as the public lacks trust in how governments use camera-generated video data. This project focuses on investigating the social acceptance of cameras and video data and developing technical solutions that will satisfy privacy concerns, including blurring faces and other identifying information when using biometric data so that machine learning models can be trained to remove these privacy attributes from raw videos. 

 

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An aerial photo of the Pentagon, headquarters of the United States Department of Defense, in Arlington County, Virginia
Marzo 12, 2026
The Anthropic Pentagon Standoff and the Limits of Corporate Ethics

Good Systems’ Sharon Strover argues that the Anthropic–Pentagon clash reveals a hard truth about AI governance: corporate ethics are no match for state power, and safety commitments mean little without legal and democratic backing.

"Behind the Lens"
Dic. 12, 2024
Behind the Lens

Good Systems' "Being Watched" project is tackling the ethical challenges of smart city surveillance by balancing public safety, privacy and equity through innovative frameworks and community-focused solutions.

Professors Peter Stone, Matthew Lease, Sherri Greenberg and S. Craig Watkins discuss the ethics of AI at the Texas Academy of Medicine Engineering Science and Technology (TAMEST) 2024 Conference, February 2024.
Ago. 9, 2024
Good Systems, Great Policy
From local initiatives to state legislative hearings, Good Systems researchers have participated in a growing number of policy discussions throughout 2024. This uptick in engagement reflects both the urgency of AI governance issues and the group's efforts to translate their research into practical policy guidance.

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