02-18-2021, 12:12 AM
I'm presently watching The Capture an English mini-series produced by BBC One.
It's a very interesting series about how CCTV cameras can be hacked in, and true footage be manipulated to include fake footage.
What I like about the series is that the actors are actors I haven't seen before - fresh faces - except for one from the US - Ron Perlman. Definitely a thought provoking series, and worrisome from the point of view how the CCTV cameras are not only taking footage, but the footage is surveyed and analyzed by dedicated workers whose jobs it is to check through it.
It's a very interesting series about how CCTV cameras can be hacked in, and true footage be manipulated to include fake footage.
What I like about the series is that the actors are actors I haven't seen before - fresh faces - except for one from the US - Ron Perlman. Definitely a thought provoking series, and worrisome from the point of view how the CCTV cameras are not only taking footage, but the footage is surveyed and analyzed by dedicated workers whose jobs it is to check through it.
Quote:When soldier Shaun Emery's conviction for a murder in Afghanistan is overturned due to flawed video evidence, he returns to life as a free man with his young daughter. But as damning CCTV footage from a night out in London comes to light, Shaun's life takes a shocking turn and he must soon fight for his freedom once more. Detective Inspector Rachel Carey is drafted to investigate Shaun's case, but she quickly learns that disentangling misinformation from truth can sometimes be a matter of perspective. In a post-truth era of deepfakes, alternative facts and ubiquitous surveillance, seeing is deceiving; told through the lens of the intelligence community's extraordinary oversight capability, this conspiracy thriller troubles the timely question of whether we can really believe our eyes.Source: https://www.google.com/search?client=fir...ure+series