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Ottawa focuses on IP cameras to secure facilities

Ottawa focuses on IP cameras to secure facilities

By:  Nestor E Arellano  On: 19 Apr 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator

The City of Ottawa is replacing its aging army of 400 closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras with Internet Protocol (IP)-enabled units that will improve data gathering and security system integration

The cameras can also be attached to an alarm and two-way audio system to enable security personnel to talk to and receive verbal response from persons in the camera's view.

While CCTVs, analog cameras and tape-based video recorders still dominate the security market, these are aging technologies, according to Gauvreau.

Centralized surveillance monitoring, once a major advantage offered by CCTV could now be a disadvantage in an increasingly mobile world where access to security videos might be demanded from a laptop or wireless handheld device, he said.

Gauvreau is also planning to integrate the new cameras with an automated card entry system that the city uses for its employees.

Reliable means of authentication have become more vital to organizations as technological advances make it easier to fabricate or steal identity, according to Alicia Wanless, visionary and coordinator of the Walsingham Institute, a Toronto-based security think tank.

"Organizations are increasingly searching for more tamper-proof means of identification," she said. For instance, Wanless said, governments are increasingly moving towards biometric ID cards.

Although not yet widely used in the government space, biometrics has trickled down to the consumer space. "We now have simple biometric locks for laptops that sell for as low as $20. We'll see more of these types of gadgets as prices go down further," said Wanless.

While Ottawa does not employ biometric cards, IP cameras deployed at city building entrances will provide an extra layer or authentication, Gauvreau said. "Apart from magnetic card IDs, we will also have visual confirmation and recorded images of the person entering the building."

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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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