... ishmael n. daro | video

Posts tagged ‘video’

August 6th, 2010

Man faces 16 years in prison for videotaping the police


Back in May of this year, a Maryland man named Anthony Graber went for a motorcycle ride on the interstate, along with his helmet-mounted camera so he could record the ride. Graber was clearly speeding, for which he deserved a ticket, but when a state trooper caught up with him he wasn’t stopped in the routine way. Instead of asking him to pull over with blaring sirens, a plain-clothes trooper in an unmarked car cut him off in traffic and exited his car brandishing a gun. Graber thought he was going to get shot or robbed of his motorcycle but the trooper belatedly identified himself and issued the speeding ticket.

Graber, who is a Maryland Air National Guard staff sergeant, put his helmet camera’s video of the encounter on YouTube and though the trooper had been rather needlessly aggressive, he thought the matter over. Apparently, the state police disagreed and soon after the video was posted online they charged him for having recorded the encounter — apparently a violation of wiretapping laws — and seized his computers from his home.

As video recording devices become increasingly cheap and embedded in everything from phones to mp3 players, encounters that cast police in a bad light have become common. Police forces in return are fighting back by charging citizens with these dubious wiretapping violations in an effort to, presumably, intimidate people from posting such embarrassing videos for all to see.

Time Magazine reports:

In the case of Graber — a young husband and father who had never been arrested — the police searched his residence and seized computers. Graber spent 26 hours in jail even before facing the wiretapping charges that could conceivably put him away for 16 years.

[...]

The legal argument prosecutors rely on in police video cases is thin. They say the audio aspect of the videos violates wiretap laws because, in some states, both parties to a conversation must consent to having a private conversation recorded. The hole in their argument is the word “private.” A police officer arresting or questioning someone on a highway or street is not having a private conversation. He is engaging in a public act.

It’s always distressing when people who are vested with special powers in order to keep public order abuse those powers to harass or intimidate members of the public they purportedly serve. In Canada, the events surrounding the G20 protests are a recent example of how quickly power without oversight becomes abusive. There were countless stories of police harassing innocent people, conducting mass arrests and detaining people without charges. Oh, and lying about what authority they had to arrest people.

In the case of the G20 abuses, one of the ways word got out about police excess was the use of video. I would hate for police officers to be viewed with automatic suspicion, but people we respect and expect to do the right thing do not get a free pass because they are in uniform.

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May 24th, 2010

My latest obsession: MSTRKRFT and the Fresh Prince

This is hardly a new clip, but I’ve been watching it repeatedly for the last week. It’s an old clip from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air with DJ Jazzy Jeff playing drums while Will Smith does some funky ’90s dancing. The song, “Bounce” by MSTRKRFT, is also pretty infectious.

I wonder if I can get that shuffle down before the next night out.

.

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May 6th, 2010

VIDEO: Born Ruffians – What to Say

Born Ruffians, a Toronto-based three-piece pop band that makes some of the catchiest music around. They’re releasing their second full-length album Say It at the end of this month, on May 31. Here’s the music video for the song “What to Say” from that album. It’s very neat.

The lead single from Say It is just as catchy. You can listen below or download it from Stereogum.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Born Ruffians – Sole Brother

[MySpace] [iTunes] [Amazon]

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April 5th, 2010

Wikileaks video: Collateral Murder

This new video was released today by Wikileaks. I haven’t been able to bring myself to watch it just yet, but the descriptions on various websites are truly disturbing.

Incidents like this strengthen my natural distrust of military organizations and the culture that goes along with them. Especially since maxims like “support the troops” are spouted by citizens and officials of all stripes with very little controversy, it’s important to be skeptical of the military apparatus.

helicopter pilot desperate to shoot at civilians carrying a wounded man


That’s not to say that all soldiers are inherently evil, cold-blooded killers or even that militaries encourage this sort of unconscionable behaviour. But we ought to put to bed the notion that anyone who views defence and national security with skepticism is a fool, that anyone who wants greater transparency for military or intelligence organizations is supporting terrorists, and that anyone who sees the creeping militarism of the last decade as a threat to our way of life is paranoid.

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March 3rd, 2010

Chatroulette is full of penises


ISHMAEL N. DARO
News Writer

For about two months, talking to strangers has been all the rage.

The reason for this is the meteoric rise of Chatroulette, the Internet’s latest chat site. It matches you up with random strangers around the world. Users can communicate via webcam and microphone or simply through text, although without a camera you’re likely to get “nexted.”

Indeed, that is one of the defining features of Chatroulette: if you don’t like what you see, you simply click “Next” and get matched up with someone else.

In an age of ever-increasing interconnectedness with sites like Facebook and Twitter, Chatroulette is a refreshing splash of anonymity. It even resembles early Internet chat services in which strangers simply spoke to other strangers across the world, often looking for a sexual connection.

A brief spin through Chatroulette will have its mix of nudity, some of it mild, most of it downright scandalous. However, unlike traditional chat rooms, typing “asl” to ask for someone’s age, sex and location will get you suspended for 10 minutes.

The service is relatively young and has only gained in popularity in the last several weeks. Started by Andrey Ternovskiy, a Russian teenager who wanted a new way to chat with his friends, the site soon gained a following and its user base exploded. Ternovskiy, 17, built and maintains the site by himself but he has already attracted the attentions of people in the tech industry with deep pockets.

Ternovskiy told the New York Times that he never advertised his site, “but somehow, people started to talk to each other about the site. And the word started to spread. That’s how the simultaneous user count grew from 10 to 50, then from 50 to 100 and so on.”

Chatroulette’s website shows there are “more than 20,000” users online at any given time, but the real figure is likely much higher, perhaps in the millions. That means that Chatroulette offers users the chance to come face to face with over a million strangers (or their genitals) all around the world.

I tried my luck at Chatroulette and got a mixed bag. My first stranger was a young man in his 20s looking disinterestedly at the camera, a cigarette tucked behind his ear. After saying hello and not getting a response, I clicked next.

A blank screen. I clicked next.

Another blank screen. This time I waited and repeatedly asked if anyone was on the other side. Suddenly the blank screen changed and revealed a man’s erection. I clicked next.

On my next try, a friendly wave hello merited me an immediate disconnection. As did the next five tries. At this point, I almost wished for the erection to come back on screen. At least it didn’t skip me so cruelly.

One last try, and I got matched up with a blonde 19-year-old woman with hoop earrings taking long drags from her cigarette between one-word responses. She was from Turkey.

I asked her why she used Chatroulette, but she just stared back at me in boredom before disconnecting. It seems no one really knows why they go on Chatroulette. They just do.

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photo: Flickr / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
A version of this article ran in the U of S student newspaper, the Sheaf.
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January 24th, 2010

Power to the web

There is something strangely inspiring about these Google videos — although ads would be a better description. The reason they don’t seem like ads is that most people already use Google search, YouTube, Gmail, Blogger, or any other combination of Google services so frequently that an advertisement for those services makes no sense. No one advertises for oxygen, after all. That’s how all-encompassing some web services have become, and I would include Facebook in that list.

In any case, these Google “ads” are strangely inspirational, empowering even. Weird, I know.

The National

Potholes

Paris Love Affair

There are more videos like these on YouTube but these three were my personal favourites.

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October 4th, 2009

Barack Obama is a robot

Here’s a video of Barack Obama from the recent UN summit. A reception held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York for the various delegates shows that Barack Obama has an eerily consistent smile.

Barack Obama’s amazingly consistent smile from Eric Spiegelman on Vimeo.

It’s almost as though the foreign dignitaries were standing with a cardboard Obama. Or maybe they put their heads through a “Take a picture with the president” scene at the county fair. The person who made the video put together 130 separate photos, all available from the US State Department’s flickr page.

Here’s another of his time lapse videos. This one doesn’t leave you feeling scared about whether the most powerful man in the world is an android.

Time Lapse Test: Station Fire from Eric Spiegelman on Vimeo.

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September 23rd, 2009

Finally, some funny Monty Python

Peter Griffin once joked about “the other 178 hours of Monty Python stuff that isn’t funny or memorable.” Not that Family Guy is anything special anymore, but it certainly seems that Monty Python’s reputation is slightly inflated by the group’s many fans.

When old reruns of Monty Python’s Flying Circus are on TV, the jokes are sometimes outdated — comedy doesn’t always age well — but usually the show is just flat-out unfunny. Sure, some of the sketches are cute, but I can’t imagine watching season after season of it.

Still, I just came across this Python sketch about a Robin Hood-like character named Dennis Moore. Thanks to the magic of YouTube, here are parts one and two.

Update: A recent NYTimes piece about the surprising longevity of Monty Python’s Flying Circus.

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July 18th, 2009

Before he was Dr. House

Here’s an old clip of Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry on the BBC. I’m still amazed at how good of an American accent Hugh Laurie does on House.

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