Digital Camera "Blinding" Device Developed at Georgia Tech

Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a prototype digital camera "neutralizing" system that can locate digital video or still cameras within a given area — like a movie theater — and then project a thin beam of white light that "blinds" the camera.

The prototype device works because a digital camera’s image sensor — a charge-coupled device (CCD) — is retroreflective, which means it sends light back directly to its origin rather than scattering it. GTechSystem The prototype uses two cameras feeding into a computer to look for reflected light from a camera's CCD. Then, using data from the system cameras, the computer pinpoints the location of the offending camera.

“We’re at a point right now where the prototype we have developed could lead to products for markets that have a small, critical area to protect” including "government buildings, industrial settings or trade shows," said Gregory Abowd, leader of the project at Georgia Tech. “Then we’re also looking to do additional research that could increase the protected area for one of our more interesting clients, the motion picture industry.”

Sounding remarkably like an MPAA podbot, team member James Clawson said, “Movie piracy is a $3 billion-a-year problem. If someone videotapes a movie in a theater and then puts it up on the web that night or burns half a million copies to sell on the street – then the movie industry has lost a lot of in-theater revenue.”

An MPAA study claims that movie piracy in China alone cost the film industry $2.7 billion in 2005.

"The biggest problem is making sure we don't get false positives from, say, a large shiny earring," said Jay Summet, yet another team member. "We need to make our system work well enough so that it can find a dot, then test to see if it's reflective, then see if it's retroreflective, and then test to see if it's the right shape" before shooting the neutralizing beam, he said.

Once that system is relatively fail-safe, reports indicate more radical elements within the film industry are agitating to have the camera-blinding white light upgraded to either a death laser, or, for the more Biblically-inclined, a Sodom and Gomorrah-style pillar-of-salt ray.

False positives are a particular concern under these less forgiving circumstances, although in the current (wimpy) system, researchers say light beam energy levels would be low enough to preclude any health risks to evil camera operators.

In 2003, Disney issued security staff at movie theaters night vision goggles and metal detectors to help detect pirates at screenings of the smash animated film Finding Nemo.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Dave

    Jun 21, 2006 at 3:46 pm

    I want to smash something now. This is so gonna get abused that no one will be able to take pictures anywhere anymore and will limit freedom of expression and freedom of the press.

    Sometimes I abhor technology

  • 2 - Eric Olsen

    Jun 21, 2006 at 3:51 pm

    "If you outlaw digital cameras, only outlaws will have digital cameras"

  • 3 - Matthew T. Sussman

    Jun 21, 2006 at 4:44 pm

    In the meantime, I'll continue to paste a picture of me hard at work in front of the surveillance monitor.

  • 4 - Eric Olsen

    Jun 21, 2006 at 6:17 pm

    Suss and the ping, both hilarious!

  • 5 - mithrandir00

    Jun 22, 2006 at 7:18 am

    yeah like someone'll go out and burn half a million copies to sell on the street. get real, they're still making more money now than ever.

  • 6 - Eric Olsen

    Jun 22, 2006 at 9:14 am

    people ARE burning copies of DVDs and selling them on the street all over the "developing" world

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