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[/news/london/index.html London] is the third-most monitored city in the world and the only one in the top 10 outside [/news/china/index.html China], a new study says. <br>The UK capital has nearly 630,000 surveillance cameras, or 67 cameras for every 1,000 people - a higher level of monitoring than in Beijing, Shanghai or [/news/hong-kong/index.html Hong Kong]. <br>Only the Chinese cities of Taiyuan and Wuxi are more extensively watched than London, while the UK capital's closest rivals outside China are the Indian cities of Hyderabad and Chennai followed by Baghdad and Moscow. <br>The study by [ ]found no other city in Western Europe even close to London, where police are rolling out the use of facial recognition technology which critics have called a 'China-style mass surveillance tool'. <br>However, the study also found that 'more cameras don't necessarily reduce crime rates' with London's crime levels higher than those in less-monitored Berlin. <br>Experts say London's CCTV network grew rapidly during the 1990s when London faced threats from the IRA and both major parties were jostling to be seen as tough on crime. <br>Britain has also seen a boom in privately-owned CCTV cameras, which are now thought to outnumber public surveillance cameras by as much as 70 to 1.   <br>        This chart shows the world's top 10 most-monitored cities, measured by the number of CCTV cameras per 1,000 people.<br><br>London is third in the world by this measure, the only city outside China to make the top 10 <br>CCTV was first used temporarily in London during the Queen's coronation in 1953 and started to be installed permanently in the 1960s. <br>Since then the city has frequently been a target for terrorists ranging from the IRA in the 1980s and 1990s to more recent attacks by Islamic extremists.   <br>London has also faced the threats of hooliganism at its many sports grounds as well as crime on one of the world's most extensive public transport networks.   <br>A 2017 report by the Police Foundation said the 1993 murder of James Bulger in Liverpool, who was shown on CCTV being led away from his mother by his two 10-year-old killers, 'undoubtedly' fuelled support for more surveillance in the UK. <br>Before the Bulger killing, CCTV had mostly been used against traffic offenders but the case illustrated how it could be used more widely, the Police Foundation said. <br>   RELATED ARTICLES  [# Previous] [# 1] [# Next]    [/news/article-8556665/Are-Englands-coronavirus-cases-creeping-up.html  Are England's coronavirus cases creeping up? Official data...] [/news/article-8556371/Care-home-outbreaks-Covid-like-illnesses-highest-month-PHE-data-shows.html  Outbreaks of Covid-like illnesses in care homes are at their...] [/news/article-8555817/France-Norway-threaten-CLOSE-border-Spain-soaring-coronavirus-cases.html  Europe starts to cut off Spain amid fears of second wave:...]    <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br>The growth in CCTV has also been linked to both major parties' desire to be seen as tough on crime, especially during the 1990s when then-opposition leader Tony Blair was trying to reform Labour's image. <br>'The populist view has consistently been that only criminals, or those with something to hide, would contest an increase in the use of cameras,' the report argued. <br>The Information Commissioner's Office has said that the Home Office spent 78 per cent of its crime prevention budget on installing CCTV during the 1990s. <br>More cameras were installed ahead of the London 2012 Olympic Games, just weeks after the Queen's Diamond Jubilee which also required heavy security.  <br>The Metropolitan Police said in 2018 that it owns only 3,000 cameras on the sides of buildings, saying that Transport for London is responsible for more CCTV than them.<br>However, the Met announced in January that they would begin the operational use of live facial recognition (LFR) cameras in London. <br>First used in the capital at the Notting Hill carnival in 2016, the cameras will alert police when they spot anyone on 'wanted' lists. <br>       A CCTV camera in London - where police are experimenting with the use of facial recognition technology which critics say is a 'China-style surveillance tool'<br>The campaign group Big Brother Watch said last month that the use of live facial recognition was 'one of the most serious threats to civil liberties of recent years'<br>'This China-style mass surveillance tool risks turning CCTV cameras into biometric checkpoints and citizens into walking ID cards,' they said.  <br>London transport bosses first experimented with CCTV while building the Victoria Line in the 1960s. From the 1970s onwards, it became a convenient way to phase out train guards on the Underground because drivers could monitor what was happening on CCTV. <br>The Tube network now has 13,000 cameras of its own, not including 700 on the Docklands Light Railway and 600 on the London Overground. London's thousands of buses have also been fitted with their own surveillance systems since the 1980s.    <br>Today, much of London's suite of surveillance cameras is operated by private owners in their households or cars. <br>CCTV manufacturers can self-certify that their equipment is safe from cyber attack and companies offer home surveillance systems for less than £1,000. <br>UK regulations say that data protection laws do not apply if the cameras cover only a person's private property, including their garden. <br>A 2015 study found that privately owned CCTV cameras may outnumber public ones by as much as 70 to 1 across the UK.    <br>Comparitech says it is not fully clear how many privately-owned systems are included in the estimate of 627,727 surveillance cameras across London.  <br>         A map of some of China's most-monitored cities, although figures show Beijing has fewer CCTV cameras per head than London does<br>         more videos    [# ]  [# 1]  [# 2]  [# 3]  [# ]          [/video/news/video-2304596/Video-CCTV-shows-man-near-scene-sexual-assault-Wolverhampton.html  Watch video CCTV shows man near the scene of a sexual assault in Wolverhampton]  [/video/news/video-2304412/Video-Awful-moment-huge-fire-breaks-lorry-explodes-Cambridgeshire.html  Watch video Awful moment huge fire breaks out as lorry explodes in Cambridgeshire]  [/video/news/video-2304558/Video-Russian-vogue-model-taken-police-killing-husband.html  Watch video Russian vogue model taken in by police after allegedly killing husband]  [/video/news/video-2303166/Video-Angry-passenger-puts-gum-coffee-hair-person-front.html  Watch video Angry plane passenger puts gum and coffee in hair of woman in front]       [/video/news/video-2304494/Video-Trump-teases-possible-2024-run-White-House-Christmas-party.html  Watch video Trump teases possible 2024 run at White House Christmas party]  [/video/news/video-2304562/Video-Police-away-Russian-model-killed-husband.html  Watch video Police take away Russian model after she allegedly killed her husband]  [/video/news/video-2304050/Video-Spanish-police-continue-search-missing-Brit-Esther-Dingley.html  Watch video Spanish police continue their search for missing Brit Esther Dingley]  [/video/news/video-2304146/Dog-mimics-owner-sticking-tongue-camera.html  Watch video Dog mimics owner by sticking his tongue out for the camera]      [/video/news/video-2303816/Video-Worlds-loneliest-elephant-meets-time-8-years.html  Watch video Worlds loneliest elephant meets another for first time in 8 years]  [/video/news/video-2303730/Video-Citizen-journalist-arrested-performing-audit-police-station.html  Watch video Citizen journalist arrested for 'performing audit' of police station]  [/video/news/video-2304328/Video-Fisherman-spotted-converted-rainwater-tank-motor.html  Watch video Fisherman spotted in a converted rainwater tank with a motor]  [/video/news/video-2304516/Video-Grandmother-uses-table-defend-business-against-unruly-customer.html  Watch video Grandmother uses table to defend business against unruly customer]        <br><br>DM.later('bundle', function()<br>DM.molFeCarousel.init('#p-31', 'channelCarousel', <br>"activeClass" : "wocc",<br>"pageCount" : "3.0",<br>"pageSize" : 1,<br>"onPos": 0,<br>"updateStyleOnHover": true<br>);<br>);<br>Outside China, London's closest surveillance rivals are the Indian cities of Hyderabad (with 30 cameras per 1,000 people) and Chennai (with 26), followed by Baghdad (17) and Moscow (15). <br>Berlin is London's closest rival in Western Europe, but the figure is only 17,464 cameras for 3.5million people or one for every five residents. <br>Germany's privacy laws are notoriously strict and the government has warned that GDPR data regulations are a further restriction on private surveillance.  <br>Madrid, Milan and Paris all have similar levels of surveillance to Berlin, a long way below that which is seen in London. <br>Some other global megacities barely register in the table, including Sao Paulo with only 0.22 cameras per 1,000 people or one for every 4,500.  <br>[http://rt.com/search/everywhere/term/China%20accounts/ China accounts] for all but two of the top 20 places, with the most-monitored city - Taiyuan - having 120 cameras for every 1,000 people. <br>Taiyuan has upped its use of surveillance cameras quite significantly with 380,000 cameras being added in 2015 as part of its Skynet project,  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-trung-quoc-nam-ninh-cong-vien-khung-long-thanh-tu-son-3-ngay.html tour du lịch nam ninh] Comparitech says. <br>The study also found that there was only 'barely' a correlation between the number of cameras and  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-trung-quoc-nam-ninh-cong-vien-khung-long-thanh-tu-son-3-ngay.html tour nam ninh] a city's crime rate. <br>For example, London's crime rate is measured slightly higher than that in Berlin despite its vastly greater surveillance network. <br>'Broadly speaking, more cameras doesn't necessarily reduce crime rates,' the report said.  <br>Comparitech editor Paul Bischoff warned that China could use recent diplomatic rows over Hong Kong and the Uighur people to install even more surveillance.<br>Beijing is facing growing criticism over its tough new national security law in Hong Kong and its imprisonment of Uighur people in Xinjiang.  <br>'I don't think the international backlash over Hong Kong, Uighurs, and coronavirus will deter the PRC from adopting more CCTV surveillance and face recognition,' Bischoff said. <br>'In fact, these issues could serve as justification for even more CCTV surveillance.<br><br>Chinese authorities believe Hong Kong threatens sovereignty, Uighurs threaten national security, and coronavirus threatens public health. <br>'They could make an argument that more CCTV surveillance and face recognition can help curb all of these threats. <br>'But as these supposed threats come and go, the cameras will remain, and China has few checks in place to reign in how authorities use them to restrict freedom of movement and assembly.' <br>         more videos    [# ]  [# 1]  [# 2]  [# 3]  [# ]          [/video/news/video-2304214/Video-Hancock-emotionally-reveals-step-grandfather-died-Covid.html Watch video Matt Hancock emotionally reveals his step-grandfather died of Covid]  [/video/news/video-2304412/Video-Awful-moment-huge-fire-breaks-lorry-explodes-Cambridgeshire.html  Watch video Awful moment huge fire breaks out as lorry explodes in Cambridgeshire]  [/video/news/video-2303166/Video-Angry-passenger-puts-gum-coffee-hair-person-front.html  Watch video Angry plane passenger puts gum and coffee in hair of woman in front]  [/video/news/video-2304000/Video-Sickening-moment-man-knifes-ex-girlfriend-chest.html Watch video Sickening moment man knifes his ex-girlfriend in the chest]      [/video/news/video-2304446/Video-Project-Veritas-confronts-Jeff-Zucker-CNN-conference-call.html  Watch video Project Veritas confronts Jeff Zucker on CNN conference call]   [/video/news/video-2304050/Video-Spanish-police-continue-search-missing-Brit-Esther-Dingley.html  Watch video Spanish police continue their search for missing Brit Esther Dingley]  [/video/news/video-2303816/Video-Worlds-loneliest-elephant-meets-time-8-years.html Watch video Worlds loneliest elephant meets another for first time in 8 years]  [/video/news/video-2304256/Group-four-removes-mysterious-Utah-monolith.html  Watch video Group of four removes mysterious Utah monolith]      [/video/news/video-2303742/Video-Michael-Gove-says-no-plans-roll-vaccine-passports.html  Watch video Michael Gove says there no plans to roll out vaccine passports]  [/video/news/video-2303920/Video-Marketing-expert-went-wrong-retail-giant-Debenhams.html Watch video Marketing expert on what went wrong for retail giant Debenhams]   [/video/news/video-2304508/Video-Peter-Hamby-teases-upcoming-interview-President-Obama.html  Watch video Peter Hamby teases upcoming interview with President Obama]  [/video/news/video-2303730/Video-Citizen-journalist-arrested-performing-audit-police-station.html  Watch video Citizen journalist arrested for 'performing audit' of police station]        <br><br>DM.later('bundle', function()<br>DM.molFeCarousel.init('#p-32', 'channelCarousel', <br>"activeClass" : "wocc",<br>"pageCount" : "3.0",<br>"pageSize" : 1,<br>"onPos": 0,<br>"updateStyleOnHover": true<br>);<br>);<br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox news" data-version="2" id="mol-9805a7a0-cdba-11ea-89bb-81be0db7ab8e" website is third most monitored city in the world
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[/news/coronavirus/index.html Coronavirus] was likely spreading in much of the U.S.<br>last December - weeks before China told the officially recognized the new virus, a new study suggests. <br>Blood collected by the Red Cross between December 13 and January 17 was later sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ([/news/centers-for-disease-control-and-prevention-cdc/index.html CDC]) to be tested for antibodies to coronavirus. <br>Testing revealed antibodies to the virus that causes COVID-19 in 39 samples from blood donated between December 13 and December 16.<br><br>Those donations were made in [/news/california/index.html California], Oregon, and Washington. <br>Another 67 samples taken between December 30 and January 17 from donors in the Midwest and [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-thai-lan-bangkok-pattaya-5-ngay.html tour đi thái lan] Northeast were positive for antibodies, according to the Wa[# <br><br><br><br>Previous][# Previous] [# 1] [# Next]    [/health/article-9005605/Almost-county-America-coronavirus-hotspot-government-map-reveals.html  How USA has become one giant hotspot: 1,172 Americans are...] [/health/article-9002605/More-ONE-children-coronavirus-NO-symptoms-infection.html  More than ONE-THIRD of children with coronavirus have NO...]    <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br>The first U.S. case of coronavirus was not reported until January 19.  <br>It was only 12 day earlier, on January 8, that the World Health Organization (WHO) said the bizarre pneumonia sickening people in China was likely caused by an altogether new virus.  <br>Chinese authorities have notified the WHO of a cluster of unexplained illnesses on December 31The virus was isolated and its genetic makeup was sequence by January 7. <br>At that time, both the Chinese government and the WHO were urging calm, insisting that the virus was only spreading from people who had symptoms and did not pose a major threat to people outside China's Hubei Province. <br>Even the first case identified in the U.S.<br><br>- in a Washington state man who had recently [http://www.zixiutangpollencapsules.com/?s=returned returned] from China - was not an indication that coronavirus was going to take hold in the U.S., officials said at the time. <br>We now know that it already was taking hold. <br>Previous genetic sequencing studies have shown that coronavirus was likely already on both coasts of the U.S.<br><br>by mid- to late-January, starting to circulate in broader communities in February. <br>But testing of blood donated to the Red Cross confirms what the studies of coronavirus genomes suggested: COVID-19 was here, long before Americans knew it. <br>The new study, published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, tested samples from 7,389 blood donations for antibodies to the virus. <br>         <br>         <br>         <br>Antibodies were present in 106 - 1.4 percent - of the donations collected between mid-December and mid-January. <br>The use of antibodies to assess how prevalent the virus is has been questioned. <br>Antibodies fade over time, with some studies suggesting that they become undetectable within two or three months of infection.  <br>There is also the possibility that blood could react to testing if someone had antibodies to one of the hundreds of other types of coronaviruses in the environment. <br>But 90 of the Red Cross samples were tested for antibodies very specific to SARS-CoV-2 - immune proteins that the scientists had made sure were not cross-reactive with test for other coronaviruses. <br>Of the 90, 84 samples were positive for these very specific antibodies. <br>In the batch of samples taken from later blood donations - made between December 17 and December 30, the scientist found that 67 were positive for coronavirus antibodies. <br>These samples came from donors in Massachusetts, Michigan, Wisconsin or Iowa and Connecticut or Rhode Island. <br>So not only was coronaviru already on the West Coast before the first U.S.<br><br>case was confirmed there, it was already in states on the other side of the country before the Washington patient was identified. <br>President Trump was perhaps the most promise voice in a chorus that blamed China for 'covering up' the severity of the coronavirus outbreak in the early days of the pandemic's global spread. <br>China's Communist Party has a poor [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-thai-lan-bangkok-pattaya-5-ngay.html tour đi thái lan] track record for  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-thai-lan-bangkok-pattaya-5-ngay.html tour thái lan giá rẻ] disease outbreaks and transparency.   <br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox health" data-version="2" id="mol-b6d07180-341a-11eb-8974-6f898e53e517" website was spreading in the US by December 17, study finds

Revision as of 23:54, 3 January 2021

[/news/coronavirus/index.html Coronavirus] was likely spreading in much of the U.S.
last December - weeks before China told the officially recognized the new virus, a new study suggests. 
Blood collected by the Red Cross between December 13 and January 17 was later sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ([/news/centers-for-disease-control-and-prevention-cdc/index.html CDC]) to be tested for antibodies to coronavirus. 
Testing revealed antibodies to the virus that causes COVID-19 in 39 samples from blood donated between December 13 and December 16.

Those donations were made in [/news/california/index.html California], Oregon, and Washington. 
Another 67 samples taken between December 30 and January 17 from donors in the Midwest and tour đi thái lan Northeast were positive for antibodies, according to the Wa[#



Previous][# Previous] [# 1] [# Next] [/health/article-9005605/Almost-county-America-coronavirus-hotspot-government-map-reveals.html How USA has become one giant hotspot: 1,172 Americans are...] [/health/article-9002605/More-ONE-children-coronavirus-NO-symptoms-infection.html More than ONE-THIRD of children with coronavirus have NO...]



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The first U.S. case of coronavirus was not reported until January 19.  
It was only 12 day earlier, on January 8, that the World Health Organization (WHO) said the bizarre pneumonia sickening people in China was likely caused by an altogether new virus.  
Chinese authorities have notified the WHO of a cluster of unexplained illnesses on December 31.  The virus was isolated and its genetic makeup was sequence by January 7. 
At that time, both the Chinese government and the WHO were urging calm, insisting that the virus was only spreading from people who had symptoms and did not pose a major threat to people outside China's Hubei Province. 
Even the first case identified in the U.S.

- in a Washington state man who had recently returned from China - was not an indication that coronavirus was going to take hold in the U.S., officials said at the time. 
We now know that it already was taking hold. 
Previous genetic sequencing studies have shown that coronavirus was likely already on both coasts of the U.S.

by mid- to late-January, starting to circulate in broader communities in February. 
But testing of blood donated to the Red Cross confirms what the studies of coronavirus genomes suggested: COVID-19 was here, long before Americans knew it. 
The new study, published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, tested samples from 7,389 blood donations for antibodies to the virus. 



Antibodies were present in 106 - 1.4 percent - of the donations collected between mid-December and mid-January. 
The use of antibodies to assess how prevalent the virus is has been questioned. 
Antibodies fade over time, with some studies suggesting that they become undetectable within two or three months of infection.  
There is also the possibility that blood could react to testing if someone had antibodies to one of the hundreds of other types of coronaviruses in the environment. 
But 90 of the Red Cross samples were tested for antibodies very specific to SARS-CoV-2 - immune proteins that the scientists had made sure were not cross-reactive with test for other coronaviruses. 
Of the 90, 84 samples were positive for these very specific antibodies. 
In the batch of samples taken from later blood donations - made between December 17 and December 30, the scientist found that 67 were positive for coronavirus antibodies. 
These samples came from donors in Massachusetts, Michigan, Wisconsin or Iowa and Connecticut or Rhode Island. 
So not only was coronaviru already on the West Coast before the first U.S.

case was confirmed there, it was already in states on the other side of the country before the Washington patient was identified. 
President Trump was perhaps the most promise voice in a chorus that blamed China for 'covering up' the severity of the coronavirus outbreak in the early days of the pandemic's global spread. 
China's Communist Party has a poor tour đi thái lan track record for tour thái lan giá rẻ disease outbreaks and transparency.   
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox health" data-version="2" id="mol-b6d07180-341a-11eb-8974-6f898e53e517" website was spreading in the US by December 17, study finds