The Realities of AI Video Surveillance

The Financial Times has a good article on how AI is changing the capabilities of video surveillance, with information from both Israel/Iran and Russia.

I wrote about this sort of thing a few years ago, how AI enables mass spying in the way that computers and networks enabled mass surveillance. The interesting development in the article is that AI allows people to ask natural language questions about video footage to AIs—and AIs can answer them.

In contrast with older tools restricted to a few dozen preset searches, these new tools allow an almost unlimited range of enquiries by enabling language-based searches on video.

That lets intelligence officers hunt through massive streams of videos using simple search terms, such as two men handing a bag to each other; a person who has changed their appearance, or has changed clothes multiple times in a day; or a vehicle that has recently been painted over, or has driven past the same spot several times in a short period.

“This is the holy grail of surveillance,” said a European official whose country uses the technology on its cities. “We are able to look for behaviour, not objects ­ it has created a world of new possibilities.”

Posted on June 30, 2026 at 8:05 AM1 Comments

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Rontea June 30, 2026 10:19 AM

In the cold theater of human obedience, mass surveillance is the silent usher, guiding our steps without ever laying a hand on us. It watches, collects, and remembers; and in that memory, we begin to walk straighter, speak softer, and avert our eyes from rebellion. But mass spying—ah, that is the confession booth without a priest, the echo of our own whispers returned as judgment. When every secret is captured, sorted, and understood, the soul itself trembles into conformity. Surveillance freezes our gestures; spying freezes our thoughts. Under the regime of knowing everything we do, we grow careful. Under the regime of knowing everything we say, we grow voiceless. This is the perfection of the chilling effect: a world where man becomes his own jailer, fearful even of his own mind.

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