Monday, February 25, 2008

So when they start aiming this at the master bedroom in your house

You'll be ok with it?

Motorists will be targeted by a new generation of road cameras which work out how many people are in a car by measuring the amount of bodily fluid it contains.

The latest snooping device on the nation's roads aims to penalise lone drivers who abuse car-sharing lanes, and is part of a Government effort to combat congestion at busy times.

The cameras work by sending an infrared beam through the windscreen of vehicles which detects the unique make-up of blood and water content in human skin.

The system's inventors believe it will catch out motorists who try to fool existing CCTV road cameras by placing mannequins in passenger seats or fixing photographs to windscreens.

It will at first be used to police car-sharing lanes in Leeds, but councils across the country have already expressed an interest in using them.

Professor John Tyrer, who headed the Loughborough University team which created the device, said it would reduce congestion.

"It allows you to automatically count people," he said.

"That pools through to the congestion charging, so they can charge differently or reduce the rates dramatically if you've got more people in the cars."

But motoring organisations claim the cameras are a further intrusion on private lives and say car-sharing lanes – which are already in operation in Birmingham and Leeds and are being built on the M1 in Hertfordshire – do not work.

2 comments:

Steve Bates said...

Oh, yeah, this technological fix should work for, um, maybe a couple of hours, until someone figures out that they can place a large plastic bag of... what? salt water? chicken blood? ... inside the mannequin.

Read my lips: there is no technological remedy for every problem.

ellroon said...

LOL! My husband immediately suggested almost the same things, Steve.

The main design flaw in all of new technology is the human element. If we think these things up, we can think up ways to get around them...