>One in three people have become victims of a crime which averages at one theft every nine seconds. In the UK alone, around £1.2 million is lost every day, despite the advent of chip and PIN technology.
What does it mean for us?
Is it really that easy to make money through fraud? Why do people work jobs then.
Cooper Walker
Bump
Dominic Ramirez
How is crime profitable in the UK? There are cameras everywhere. What are all the cameras used for if they don't use it to follow the criminals home?
Grayson Fisher
They don't have resources for it.
Do you realize how busy police and courts would be?
Tyler Kelly
They should just get some sort of automatic recognition to do it. Just choose the person to follow and let the computer do it and recognize from other cameras. The technology already exists
Christian Jackson
The technology would be deemed racist for disproportionately following blacks.
Matthew Bennett
>Why do people work jobs then Because while the chances of being caught for doing it once, the punishment is very very costly and you will probably be caught eventually if you do it enough to make a decent living off of.
Lincoln Robinson
You can just manually choose criminals to follow during the crime and let black people get away with it until yo have your quota of white criminals.
Owen Gonzalez
>Because while the chances of being caught for doing it once are low*
Angel Cook
But according to statistics it seems so tremendously unlikely.
If you look at any country, MILLIONS are fraudulently stolen a day.
And yet at most you'll find a handful of major fraud busts a year in the country.
It really seems like a crime that makes all other crime obsolete.
Why rob gas stations or banks when you can use malware to make many times more, with far lower chance of getting caught and IF CAUGHT serve a small fraction of the time?
Why do people even rob or sell drugs???
Hudson Williams
Because, HEY, guess what, there aren't cameras fucking everywhere. Stop perpetuating that retarded meme.
Most of those cameras in that shit report were privately owned CCTV for stores and shit. Good luck passing legislation to allow free use of any camera. Even Snoopers Charter gets off lightly next to that.
Most government cameras are in government property, high-crime areas and roads. That's it. Maybe a few in busy town centers here and there on main roads.
Ryder Lee
>Because, HEY, guess what, there aren't cameras fucking everywhere. >Stop perpetuating that retarded meme.
I used to live in britain, there are cameras everywhere.
Liam Hernandez
>Why do people even rob or sell drugs??? Most people are dumb. Also the people stealing ccs are generally from some shit country which won't care.
Gabriel Scott
would just be deemed racist for intentionally ignore black people.
thank god for black people and sjws making fair surveillance impractical from a social point of view.
Christian James
They do it in every country. It's common as fuck
Gavin Rogers
>would just be deemed racist for intentionally ignore black people.
How is that racist if you ignore the crime they are doing?
in YOUR country maybe, it's highly uncommon here
Grayson Walker
What country?
Guarantee it's more common than you think. It's shocking really.
Andrew Jackson
>thinks Every single square inch of the Uk has cameras and not just major cities.
Dylan Torres
Yea there are you fucking social justice faggot
Justin Edwards
No there isnt. Unless you live in a city you dont see cctv everywhere.
You tinfoil hat conspiracy theory spastics are hilarious. You probably live in some shithole area
Thomas Turner
People give their logging info for free on facebook, no real crime
Ryder Sanchez
Since this thread is probably populated by brits
Does anybody know a single ISP that can give me 100/100 speeds or higher. I'm in fucking london and not a single one of the fibre companies are even doing anything near me
Kevin White
I DO LIVE IN BRITAIN. I know of 5 council-owned cameras outside of main town-center streets, in places with high teen crime and stupid kid gangs and shit. In town center, there's, pfft, like, maybe double at best. There's been a reduction in them since the 90s, actually.
Cities are only just barely higher in that regard, as said. Most of them you can see from street level are store-owned CCTV. Literally right on their banners or above doors.