You are here: silicon.com > Public Sector > News

Citizens use YouTube to keep gov't in check

Watching the watchers

Tags: monitor, cctv, surveillance

By Nick Heath

Published: 31 July 2008 10:00 GMT

Citizens are used to CCTV surveillance but a parliamentary group says that cameras are being turned on governments to keep them in line.

"Sous-veillance" will see video sharing sites such as YouTube used by citizens to shine a spotlight on things such as deadly hygiene lapses in hospital wards and uncollected rubbish, according to the European Information Society Group (Eurim).

The vision of the "public monitoring the state" and shaming them into action using cameraphones is one of several key ways that Eurim says technology can be used to transform government and empower the public.

Its report says: "New web applications such as YouTube or Patient Opinion enable people to monitor the state and to be heard. People can easily post videos of dirty hospital wards, of uncollected rubbish or of pot holes in the road, to a world-wide audience.

"Sous-veillance might transform political engagement due to its ease of use, by engaging even the time-poor majority and extending citizenship beyond the usual special interest groups."

Latest photo stories from silicon.com

1. Photos: The solar powered speedster

2. Photos: The building of a data centre

3. Photos: Steve Jobs dances the iPhone 3G tune

4. Photos: BlackBerry Boldly goes Qwerty over touch again

5. Photos: The enchanting Google Earth

6. Photos: A snapshot of what HP's got up its sleeve

7. Photos: Supercomputers signal when storms are a-brewing

8. Photos: Five of the best mini laptops

9. Photos: Welcome to futuristic shopping

10. Photos: Google Android unveils its face

It points to the success of the Tidy Oldham project, where residents took photos of problems and "grot spots" on their mobiles to be posted on a dedicated website.

But it warns that the approach does risk airing vendettas against individual public workers, introducing greater budget pressures and distracting from wider public service reforms.

Increasing technology available to public workers can bring similar rewards, the report says, citing cleaner streets in the London borough of Lewisham after refuse collectors were given cameraphones to take pictures of graffiti, vandalism and rubbish.

Eurim warns that simply replacing face-to-face services with internet access risks isolating the services from the most vulnerable, citing examples of the elderly being cut off following bank and post office closures. It suggests that service delivery is streamlined so it is provided using the minimum of different systems necessary to address multiple groups' needs.

It also recommends that transformation of government through technology can be best achieved if external organisations are allowed to compete to deliver services.

What do you think? Join the debate by posting your comments on this story - click on the link below.

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

silicon.com Public Sector
Get the latest public sector news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the PS newsletter today!


  • Jobs
TELESALES: Sales Account Manager (some face to face sales)

TELESALES: Sales Account Manager (some face to face sales) – Internet & website design / web media.k Basic, 27-32k OTE (1st year) uncapped + ...

IT Business analyst - Advisory

A 2:1 in Information Security or Computer Sciences is the ideal will be a mixture of Computer Science with Business Hays Information Technology Ltd ...

Support Consultant - Pathology

The job purpose is to work within a team of support specialists and provide application support to the i.Laboratory application.Main ...

Nick Heath
Let's shine a light into the public sector IT money pit
With £16bn being spent, why is productivity still falling?

Tim Ferguson
BBC is taking tech seriously, so give it a break!
Auntie is the envy of the world but doesn't get the credit it deserves at home...

Peter Cochrane
Peter Cochrane's Blog: Open info for all?
Government stonewalling citizens

Nick Heath
Home Office CIO on taming tech and why ID cards are good news
Interview: Annette Vernon, Home Office CIO

Nick Heath
NHS records, Google and Microsoft: Where do you want your data?
Politicians: Heal thyself

Alan Hunt
NHS network: Time to get secure
Patient data in need of a check up

Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.




Quick Sitemap Links: