Lex Cyberia

Sales of surveillance cameras are soaring, raising questions about privacy (30 October 2018, The Economic Times)

The Telangana government wants more eyes on the streets to upgrade Hyderabad’s safety. It has asked enterprises, public sectors, residential associations and individuals to install closed-circuit television cameras (CCTVs) in and around their premises.

More than a lakh CCTVs are expected to be installed across the city in the next few years. The initiative is part of the Nenu Saitham (Telugu for Me Too) project-being promoted by Hyderabad Police, which will monitor the feed. To ensure that lowquality CCTVs are not installed and the project is sustainable, the police has asked citizens to only buy from selected vendors.

With this move, launched in November 2017, the Telangana govt joins a growing list of governments, corporations, educational institutes, residential buildings and small businesses across the country that are buying such technology.

According to industry estimates, over a million surveillance units were sold every month a couple of years ago. Now it is two million. The Indian market is growing 20-25% annually, say experts. Industry source estimate the security & surveillance market was worth Rs 8,200 crore in FY2017, reached Rs 11,000 crore in FY2018 and is expected to touch Rs 20,000 crore in FY2020.

The rise in CCTV coverage can also be observed anecdotally. There’s a steady uptick in CCTV clips circulating on Whatsapp, capturing crimes or funny events that would otherwise have gone undocumented. Many of the sensational crimes recently, including multiple incidents of murder in Tamil Nadu, were captured on CCTV cameras, distilling the pure horror of those moments on our mobile screens, and also offering valuable proof to nail the culprits.