UbiOpticon: Participatory Sousveillance with Urban Screens and Mobile Phone Cameras

In many cities around the world, surveillance by a pervasive net of CCTV cameras is a common phenomenon in an attempt to uphold safety and security across the urban environment. Video footage is being recorded and stored, sometimes live feeds are being watched in control rooms hidden from public access and view. In this study, we were inspired by Steve Mann's original work on sousveillance (surveillance from below) to examine how a network of camera equipped urban screens could allow the residents of Oulu in Finland to collaborate on the safekeeping of their city. An agile, rapid prototyping process led to the design, implementation and 'in the wild' deployment of the UbiOpticon screen application. Live video streams captured by web cams integrated at the top of 12 distributed urban screens were broadcast and displayed in a matrix arrangement on all screens. The matrix also included live video streams of two roaming mobile phone cameras. In our field study we explored the reactions of passers-by and users of this screen application that seeks to inverse Bentham's original panopticon by allowing the watched to be watchers at the same time. In addition to the original goal of participatory sousveillance, the system's live video feature sparked fun and novel user-led apprlopriations.

[1]  J. Jacobs The Death and Life of Great American Cities , 1962 .

[2]  Albrecht Schmidt,et al.  Requirements and design space for interactive public displays , 2010, ACM Multimedia.

[3]  Anthony Townsend,et al.  Smart Cities: Big Data, Civic Hackers, and the Quest for a New Utopia , 2013 .

[4]  Timo Ojala,et al.  Municipal WiFi and interactive displays: Appropriation of new technologies in public urban spaces , 2014 .

[5]  Marcus Foth,et al.  From movie screens to moving screens : mapping qualities of new urban interactions , 2013 .

[6]  Marcus Foth,et al.  Urban informatics , 2011, CSCW.

[7]  Marcus Foth,et al.  From Social Butterfly to Engaged Citizen: Urban Informatics, Social Media, Ubiquitous Computing, and Mobile Technology to Support Citizen Engagement , 2011, UbiComp 2011.

[8]  W. Dutton The Fifth Estate Emerging through the Network of Networks , 2008 .

[9]  Johanna Ylipulli,et al.  Contesting ubicomp visions through ICT practices , 2013 .

[10]  Erika Reponen,et al.  MobiMundi: exploring the impact of user-generated mobile content -- the participatory panopticon , 2008, Mobile HCI.

[11]  Steve Mann,et al.  "Sousveillance": inverse surveillance in multimedia imaging , 2004, MULTIMEDIA '04.

[12]  Marko Jurmu,et al.  Web-based framework for spatiotemporal screen real estate management of interactive public displays , 2010, WWW '10.

[13]  R. D'amico Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison , 1978, Telos.

[14]  Mark Bilandzic,et al.  CityFlocks: designing social navigation for urban mobile information systems , 2008, DIS '08.

[15]  Pelle Ehn,et al.  Participation in design things , 2008, PDC.

[16]  Nicola Green,et al.  On the Move: Technology, Mobility, and the Mediation of Social Time and Space , 2002, Inf. Soc..

[17]  Marcus Foth,et al.  Digital soapboxes: towards an interaction design agenda for situated civic innovation , 2013, UbiComp.

[18]  M. Foucault,et al.  Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. , 1978 .

[19]  T. Ojala,et al.  From cyberpunk to calm urban computing: Exploring the role of technology in the future cityscape , 2014 .

[20]  Henri Lefebvre The Right to the City , 2012 .

[21]  P. Longley From social butterfly to engaged citizen: urban informatics, social media, ubiquitous computing, and mobile technology to support citizen engagement , 2012 .

[22]  Marko Jurmu,et al.  Multipurpose Interactive Public Displays in the Wild: Three Years Later , 2012, Computer.

[23]  Marcus Foth,et al.  Welcome to the jungle: HCI after dark , 2011, CHI Extended Abstracts.