Surveillance
in sentence
684 examples of Surveillance in a sentence
But when a president repurposes the power of federal
surveillance
and the federal government to retaliate against political opposition, that is a tyranny.
And so we are all activists now, and we all have something to fear from
surveillance.
It rolls back the golden age for
surveillance.
Second, support
surveillance
reform.
We need transparency, and we need to know as Americans what the government is doing in our name so that the
surveillance
that takes place and the use of that information is democratically accounted for.
We are all activists now, which means that we all have something to worry about from
surveillance.
Fahrenheit 451 depicts a world governed by surveillance, robotics, and virtual reality- a vision that proved remarkably prescient, but also spoke to the concerns of the time.
Or, we fret about digital
surveillance
with metaphors from the past.
And these things only work if there's an enormous amount of data, so they also encourage deep
surveillance
on all of us so that the machine learning algorithms can work.
And here's the tragedy: we're building this infrastructure of
surveillance
authoritarianism merely to get people to click on ads.
With that preamble, let's show the first two-minute videotape, which shows a little airplane for
surveillance
and moving to a giant airplane.
In the video you saw that nine-pound or eight-pound Pointer airplane
surveillance
drone that Keenan has developed and just done a remarkable job.
We need better
surveillance.
But the consequence of this constant
surveillance
is that our bodies treat helpful implants, like insulin pumps, with the same suspicion as they would a harmful virus or bacteria.
At that time, fear, propaganda, and
surveillance
kept all aspects of life for the Scholl family and millions of other Germans under Nazi control.
Are we heading toward a friction-free utopia or toward a nightmare of
surveillance?
It made me think of the past decade of my life in New York, and how I'd been all watched over by these
surveillance
cameras around the city.
So this would require ubiquitous surveillance, everybody would be monitored all the time.
CA: This is "Minority Report," essentially, a form of. NB: You would have maybe AI algorithms, big freedom centers that were reviewing this, etc., etc. CA: You know that mass
surveillance
is not a very popular term right now? (Laughter) NB: Yeah, so this little device there, imagine that kind of necklace that you would have to wear at all times with multidirectional cameras.
So the
surveillance
would be kind of governance gap at the microlevel, like, preventing anybody from ever doing something highly illegal.
Again, I just want to make sure I get the chance to stress that obviously there are huge downsides and indeed, massive risks, both to mass
surveillance
and to global governance.
But this was in 1974, and as of that moment, this photograph was the photograph that was the most widely printed, because we printed two billion copies of this photograph, and we took them hand to hand, door to door, to show people and ask them if there was smallpox in their house, because that was our
surveillance
system.
A
surveillance
system was necessary, because what we needed was early detection, early response.
The polio
surveillance
program is four million people going door to door.
That is the
surveillance
system.
Seva got started because we wanted to apply these lessons of
surveillance
and epidemiology to something which nobody else was looking at as a public health issue: blindness, which heretofore had been thought of only as a clinical disease.
Now, when your state is collapsing, your economy is heading south at a rate of knots, the last people you want coming on to the labor market are 14,000 men and women whose chief skills are surveillance, are smuggling, building underground networks and killing people.
And of course, you can also use it for
surveillance.
So that leaves a couple of places like Iran, maybe Venezuela, that you would like to have very close
surveillance
of anything that goes on with fissile stuff.
The CIA agent Roger Ferris (Leonardo DiCaprio) that operates in the Middle East is assigned by his superior at Langley Ed Hoffman (Russell Crowe) to keep a "safe house" in Amman under surveillance, and he associates to the Chief of Security in Jordan, Hani Salaam (Mark Strong).
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