CABLE GIANT Comcast is backpedalling furiously away from the unguarded revelation by its Senior Vice President of User Experience, Gerald Kunkel, that it's developing spy cameras built into cable boxes to monitor customers.
The bombshell was dropped by Chris Albrecht at newteevee.com a week ago after interviewing Comcast's Kunkel at the Digital Living Room conference in San Francisco. There, he said Comcast is "experimenting with different camera technologies built into devices so it can know who's in your living room."
Readers were shocked and incensed to learn that companies are planning the imposition of such privacy-invasive surveillance technology in their commercial products and services.
A mortified Comcast responded by hurriedly attempting to minimise the scope of its customer monitoring ambitions, claiming that its device was "in no way designed to or capable of monitoring your living room."
Albrecht was having none of it, however. He pointed out to Kunkel, "After you granted me our initial video interview, you brought up the topic of Comcast knowing who was in the living room in a conversation between you, myself and another conference attendee."
"I actually left and came back to follow up on this point while you were talking with that same attendee. At this point, you were aware that I was a reporter and I took handwritten notes in front of you as we talked to make sure I had an accurate accounting of what you were saying," Albrecht continued, nailing him.
TiVo, Microsoft, Google and others have over recent years let slip plans to add similarly invasive technologies to products and services, including computers.
It seems that Orwell's dystopian vision of a fascist society in 1984 is on the way after all, and will be imposed by corporations under the guise of marketing. µ
L'Inq
Prison
Planet
Every Home Office should have one! Otherwise, some folks would hang out at airports to show off... or worse, they may erect an INQ cam. Oranges and lemons for sure. "1984" harsh reality TV brought home for the masses. Hello, Is this 1-1-2? Yes, could you give me the number of London Calling? 

You see, this is what I've been saying. Microsoft's effect has held innovation back by decades. Otherwise we could have hit 1984 pretty much on time.

Dang Microsoft.
I had to take a look at the calendar when I read this. Are they thinking of doing some type of monitoring for real or is it April Fool's Day on some part of the planet right now?

Where do these people come up with these ideas? I wonder if they would mind being monitored themselves.
You Brits already have this, no? Isn't the UK the most surveilled country in terms of gov't cameras watching the public on the streets, subways, highways, and so on?

Why would a camera in the living room upset a Brit? They seem to like the cameras everywhere else.
I find it interesting that you are implying that 1984 is on its way to the United States when the UK has gone much farther to institutionalize a society of surveilance and reliance on the government for everything from self defense to fighting kitchen fires. Turn in your kitchen knives and fire extinguishers before they are turned on you, Great Britain.
Nothing a little duct tape over the Komcast peephole won't fix