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Step 3: Legal, Technical & Spatial Considerations

We have combined the Technical, Legal, and Spatial aspects of the OSCM toolkit in one STEP 3 as they are so closely interrelated. All these three elements need to work together and in parallel guided by an ethical framework to effectively address social values and privacy by design principles to insure digital rights.

3.0.1 – Dilemma Diagram

The Legal, Technical, and Spatial aspects of crowd monitoring projects are all interrelated and all require serious ethical considerations. In order to better understand this complexity, we have visualized these interrelations in a Venn diagram that places Ethics at the center.

Dilemma Diagram

 

3.0.2 – Applying an Ethical Framework

At this point, it is important to take a step back to get an overview of the ethical considerations involved to effectively address the social values involved in your crowd monitoring project and apply a methodology to measure strengths and weaknesses with key stakeholders.

Inclusive

Our digital city is inclusive. We take into account the differences between individuals and groups, without losing sight of equality.

Control and Tailored To The People

Data and technology should contribute to the freedom of citizens. Data are meant to serve the people. To be used as seen fit by people to benefit their lives,
to gather information, develop knowledge and find room to organise themselves. People stay in control over their data.

Open and Transparent

What types of data are collected? For what purpose? And what are the outcomes and results? We are transparent about this.

Legitimate and Monitored

Citizens and users have control over the design of our digital city. The government, civil society organizations and companies facilitate this. They monitor the development and the social consequences.

From Everyone For Everyone

Data that the city, companies and other organizations generate from the city are held in common. Everyone can use them. Everyone can benefit from them. Together we make agreements about this.

 

3.0.3 – Measuring Ethical Principles

We suggest that at this stage you hold an ethics workshop to apply a methodology to measure ethical principles related to the Legal, Technical, and Spatial considerations of your project. In Amsterdam we have used the TADA principles and workshop with success, consider using this format or source a data ethics workshop in your city.

Ethical Framework

 

3.1.1 – Legal Compliance

In Europe, GDPR compliance guided by Privacy by Design principles are where to begin when you start gathering and understanding all the information you need to start a legally responsible crowd monitoring project.

General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
(AVG – Algemene Verordening Gegevensbescherming)

The GDPR is the umbrella reference for all EU member states regarding regulations for any organization that targets or collects data related to people. It’s very important to comply with the new EU law for data privacy in every way as the fines for violations can be very heavy.  It’s complicated, but The Guide to GDPR Compliance is a good place to get familiar with regulations that you need to consider in the beginning phases of your OSCM camera vision project.

IMPORTANT: In order to make sure you are GDPR compliant you should complete the GDPR Compliance Checklist https://gdpr.eu/checklist/

Other Useful Links: https://gdpr.eu (English) and how-to-make-your-business-gdpr-compliant (English), privacy-en-persoonsgegeven (Dutch)

 

3.1.2 – Privacy By Design

The privacy by design framework is an engineering design approach which calls for privacy to be taken into account throughout the whole engineering process. The concept is an example of value sensitive design, i.e., to take human values into account in a well-defined manner throughout the whole process.  In general it is a seven step process framework to guide the design process. 

Privacy by Design

More Specifically, Privacy by Design is a key regulation in the GDPR as described in Article 25: Data Protection by Design and by Default.

For general information about Privacy by Design as a framework visit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privacy_by_design

For specific information about Privacy by Design as a regulation in the GDPR visit:
https://gdpr-info.eu/art-25-gdpr/

 

3.1.3 – Legal Compliance Overview

Among several laws, procedures, documents and ethical principles you must consider before moving forward you  needed to make sure you are familiar with the specific legal aspects of crowd monitoring in public spaces in your country, region, and city. For OSCM projects in the EU and the Netherlands here is a list of items we know are important from our experience.  For full details download the Legal Resource Library PDF. 

See below for more resources:

Name     Useful Links
European Data Protection Officer (DPO)     /data-protection-officeer-en
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA)     https://autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en
Right to Erasure Form (Part of GDPR)     https://gdpr.eu/right-to-erasure-request-form/
 IoT registration (Amsterdam)     https://slimmeapparaten.amsterdam.nl/about

 

https://www.amsterdam.nl/privacy/camera’-sensoren/

Video Camera Registration (Amsterdam)     https://www.amsterdam.nl/privacy/camera’-sensoren/
AI Register (Amsterdam)     https://algoritmeregister.amsterdam.nl/en/ai-register/
Legally required signs and stickers (Amsterdam)     https://slimmeapparaten.amsterdam.nl/about/faq
 Project Description     https://slimmeapparaten.amsterdam.nl/about/faq

Additional General Legal considerations that will vary greatly by region and use case. 

  • Governance, ownership and responsibilities 
  • Contracts and liability 
  • Open Data publishing, use, and reuse compliance issues (EU)

3.2 – Technical

As technology grows, so does the number and complexity of sensors and devices that can be used to monitor public space. The technical choices you make will relate to decisions made in the previous steps when you established your goals, use case and planned your project accordingly. What is important in this step is that you first familiarise yourself with the different options available and then take a closer look at the Degrees of Invasiveness to help guide a responsible and ethical decision.

Computer Vision

Current computer-vision systems do a decent job at classifying images and localizing objects in photos, when they’re trained on enough samples but it takes a lot of work to achieve a high level of accuracy. Computer vision applications include facial and object recognition, also biometrics which can be very invasive.

More about Computer_vision

CCTV

An acronym for Closed Circuit Television, CCTV has been around for a while and is used mostly for security purposes. It’s all about recording video footage of people either in public or private spaces and can be applied to computer vision applications but not necessarily. Also known as video surveillance, it is perhaps the most invasive technology you can use.

More about Closed-circuit_television

Sound Sensors

These come in all shapes and sizes. They can record sound or just detect it. They can be highly accurate and measure volume (dbl), tone, pitch, and/or frequency or simply detect the existence sound above a certain threshold. They all use microphones but not all deliver insights related to the nature of sound or sound identification which is enabled by using existing libraries or training using machine learning.

More about sound-sensor

Thermal

Or Thermal Imaging Cameras used for crowd monitoring use infrared technology to measure object radiation and vary greatly in range and accuracy, from detecting the existence of a person at night at long range to a fairly accurate temperature reading at close range.

/wiki/Thermographic_camera

Mobile App

Convenient because almost everybody has a Smart Phone with them wherever they go but also problematic depending on what you want to achieve. Geolocation services, Bluetooth, Wifi, and/or Mobile Data must be on for instance depending on the application.

More about Mobile App data

Motion Sensors

Or Motion Detectors can be one of several technologies including Passive Infrared (PIR), Microwave, Sonar, and Ultrasonic. Although this technology is useful to detect single object presence, iit is not effective for multiple objects or crowds in large spaces.

More about Motion_detectors

Millimeter Wave

Or high resolution radar uses an ultra high frequency radio wave to detect, locate, and track moving targets with a very high level of accuracy but with a limited distance. This technology is also used for security screening to detect weapons and other dangerous objects under clothing.

More about Millimeter Wave

WiFi Sniffer

Also known as a packet sniffer. This technology detects smart phones on Wifi mode searching for networks.  The sniffer intercepts probe requests and the MAC address of the device making it useful to track an individual in a large space but also potentially invasive. 

More about  WiFi_Sniffers

3-D Sensors

A depth sensing technology that uses three different techniques to detect and image map objects: stereoscopic vision, structured light pattern, or time of flight (ToF). All capture or produce 3-D images which are anonymous and trackable in crowded spaces with a high level of accuracy.

More about 3-D sensors

 

3.2.1 Technical – Degrees of Invasiveness

Different crowd monitoring technologies have their own degree of invasiveness depending on how they are used and where. You should be aware of how different sensors and devices can compromise privacy and compare them to others to understand your options.

Degrees of invasiveness

 

3.2.2 Technical – Invasiveness Matrix

A quick guide to the various kinds of data that different crowd monitoring technologies generate.  The Invasiveness Matrix will tell you what solutions will create biometric data versus anonymous data, location data and more.

Invasiveness matrix

The NYC IoT Strategy – Example of Assessing Privacy Risk

Every city is different but it’s a good idea to asses privacy risk as part of a city wide policy for sensing projects in public spaces.  When using these various technologies we need to be aware how invasive they can be. In March 2021, the New York City Mayor’s Office of the CTO published their IoT Strategy to plan for more inclusive sensing projects in public spaces.  As part of this report they created a three tier framework to aid decision making when gathering data in public spaces. For details download the full report.
For details about Assessing Privacy Risk download the full report here: NYC IoT Strategy

3.3 Spatial

Different spaces have different requirements when designing and implementing a sensor project. We have crated a simple example with six spatial categories and specific considerations.  Below you will find these considerations and some important questions you need to ask yourself and your team.

In Amsterdam it is compulsory for all data gathering devices or sensors to be registered. Make sure you follow the requirements in your city. For more information in Dutch:  https://www.amsterdam.nl/nieuws/nieuwsoverzicht/meldplicht-dataverzamelaars/

 

Signage:

Does your project area have signage, boards, or flags to inform public that they are in a monitoring zone? 

Privacy:

Does your project area provide the public the  right to be invisible or anonymous? How so?  

Permission:

Do you need permission from property or facility manager? In public space, you’ll need specific permissions or exceptions from the municipality. 

Agreements:

Do you need data processing agreement, data protection or any other regulatory requirements? 

Registration:

Should the cameras, project documents or FAQ’s need to be registered? 

Spacial considerations

In this example we are using the Marineterrein Amsterdam Living Lab – Inner-city test ground for a sustainable living environment. This 1/2 square mile district is a wonderful microcosm of any city space, function or activity. For more info: https://www.living-lab.nl

Private Property

Cities are mostly made up of private properties. Owners of these properties control access and can only collect data from visitors for security reasons.

  Considerations
Permission  
Agreements  
Registration  
Signage  
Privacy  

Public Parks

City parks are owned or managed by the local municipality. You’ll need special permission from authorities to collect data from these areas.

  Considerations
Permission ✔︎
Agreements ✔︎
Registration ✔︎
Signage ✔︎
Privacy ✔︎

Waterfronts & Harbors

Mixed management between the city, water authorities and sometimes private boating clubs or marinas. Collecting data needs to be approved by every stakeholder

  Considerations
Permission ✔︎
Agreements ✔︎
Registration ✔︎
Signage ✔︎
Privacy ✔︎

Campus & Business Parks 

Hospitals, universities, commercial or industrial properties are mostly private. Collecting data is usually permitted by facility management or the owner.  

  Considerations
Permission ✔︎
Agreements  
Registration  
Signage  
Privacy  

Hotels, Bars & Restaurants 

Cafes, courtyards and terraces are usually private property. Owners of these properties can collect data of their customers with consent.

  Considerations
Permission ✔︎
Agreements  
Registration  
Signage ✔︎
Privacy ✔︎

Sports Grounds & Recreation

Clubs, pitches, playgrounds or stadiums can be mixed between private and public ownerships. Collecting data of guests should be for legitimate safety reasons.

  Considerations
Permission ✔︎
Agreements ✔︎
Registration ✔︎
Signage ✔︎
Privacy ✔︎

 

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Afbeelding credits

Header afbeelding: justbynat - paars

Icon afbeelding: justbynat - paars

Media

Dilemma Diagram Ethical Framework Privacy by Design Degrees of invasiveness Invasiveness matrix Spacial considerations OSCM Interview - step 3 - Douwe Schmidt OSCM Interview - step 3 - Beryl Dreijer OSCM Interview - step 3 - Maarten Sukel OSCM Interview - step 3_3 -  Tom van Arman