Tag: cameras

Keke Palmer Grew Up In Front Of The Cameras, And Grew Up Real Fine
CELEBRITY MAIN NEWS, TOP FOUR

Keke Palmer Grew Up In Front Of The Cameras, And Grew Up Real Fine

Making her acting debut at age eight in the film Barbershop 2: Back in Business (2004), she landed the career-turning role of Akeelah in Akeelah and the Bee (2006) with Angela Bassett and Laurence Fishburne. The film won 11 awards from various organizations, plus an additional 15 nominations; Keke herself won four and had three noms. Her next two film credits were as Rose Cutler in Cleaner (2007) with Samuel L. Jackson, and Jasmine in The Longshots(2008) with Ice Cube. In 2008, she was cast as True Jackson in her own Nickelodeon TV series, True Jackson, VP, a part she held from 2008-2011, taking her from age 15 to age 18, officially ushering her into adulthood. Want Free Access to Keke Palmer Sexy Pics & Clips? Click Here An accomplished singer as well as an actress, she held her own...
Police Accountability And The Concrete Effects Of Body Cameras
IN OTHER NEWS

Police Accountability And The Concrete Effects Of Body Cameras

Suat Cubukcu, American University; Erdal Tekin, American University; Nusret Sahin, Stockton University, and Volkan Topalli, Georgia State University Without video evidence, it’s unlikely we would have ever heard of George Floyd or witnessed the prosecution of his killer, a Minneapolis police officer. The recording of Floyd’s killing echoed the documentation in the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner, two Black men who were killed at the hands of police. The circulation of such videos – witness cellphones, dashcams and police body-worn cameras – have helped awaken a protest movement centered on police accountability and systemic racism in the United States. They have also diminished trust in law enforcement, which has dipped to its lowest level since 1993, according to a 2020 Gallup...
Police Body Cameras Can Invade People’s Privacy But Help Monitor Police
CULTURE, Journalism, VIDEO REELS

Police Body Cameras Can Invade People’s Privacy But Help Monitor Police

In the course of their work, police officers encounter people who are intoxicated, distressed, injured or abused. The officers routinely ask for key identifying information like addresses, dates of birth and driver’s license numbers, and they frequently enter people’s homes and other private spaces. Police see some difficult scenes; body cameras can record those and make them public. Tony Webster via Flickr, CC BY-SA With the advent of police body cameras, this information is often captured in police video recordings – which some states’ open-records laws make available to the public. Starting in the summer of 2014, as part of research on police adoption of body-worn cameras within two agencies in Washington state, I spent hours riding in patrol vehicles, hanging out at police stations, ...
How to secure your home surveillance cameras
TECHNOLOGY

How to secure your home surveillance cameras

The easiest way for a hacker to gain access to something is to guess the username and password of the device’s administrative account Hackers are breaking into home security cameras, and the process isn’t always as difficult as you may think. In December, there were reports of hackers gaining access to Ring security cameras in Tennessee, Mississippi, Florida and Texas. And cybersecurity experts say incidents like these aren’t very complex to execute because people often use passwords that are easily guessed. “The easiest way for a hacker to gain access to something is to guess the username and password of the device’s administrative account,” said Brian Vecci, chief technology officer at the data protection company Varonis. “That’s the most common way to get hacked.” He said bad acto...