How Protest Movements Can Hijack Surveillance Tech for the Public Good

Around the world, social movements are turning drones, wearables, and other surveillance tech against the state

Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick
OneZero

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An aerial photo, presumably taken by drone, of protests in LA. “ALL BLACK LIVES MATTER” is painted on the road.
An aerial view of Hollywood Boulevard painted with the words ‘All Black Lives Matter’ near the famous TCL Chinese Theatre as protests continue in the wake of George Floyd’s death on June 13, 2020 in Los Angeles, California. Photo: Mario Tama/Mario Tama/Getty Images

Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick is associate professor at University of San Diego & University of Nottingham, whose work focuses on social change as it relates to society, politics, and technology.

It was nine o’clock in the evening and I was on the curb with a Hungarian police officer, who was asking for identification. Specifically, he was asking to see the papers of my graduate student, Tautvydas Juskauskas. In a former life, Tautis was a levelheaded lobbyist in his native Lithuania. In a future life, he would work for the world’s largest drone manufacturer and later lead drone operations in Malawi for the United Nations Children’s Fund. That evening, however, he was a suspect, wondering what he’d gotten himself into.

Tautis and I were in the process of documenting the largest street protests seen in Hungary since the collapse of the Berlin Wall. The government wanted to raise revenue by taxing the internet traffic of every business and individual, whether at home or on a digital device. The officer was perplexed by our technology and by our role in the event. We explained that we were conducting…

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Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick
OneZero

Speaker: Culture, Politics, Tech // Author: The Good Drone @MITpress & What Slaveholders Think @ColumbiaUP // Prof: @uofsandiego & @UniofNottingham //