Americans vastly underestimate how often they are recorded on CCTV, by a factor of ~10x, based on a Google Consumer Survey study that IPVM recently commissioned, raising concerns about whether the public fully understands the depth of overall video surveillance.

Average American Assumes 4 Cameras or Less Per Day

The majority of 1,000 respondents to this Google Consumer Survey assumed they were recorded on CCTV camera 4 times or less per day:

Check out the full Google Consumer Survey results we commissioned, including more details such as men responding with being recorded by almost twice the number of cameras as woman.

50+ Times Per Day Is More Likely

CCTV Cameras are installed almost everywhere today, due to increasing security concerns, and the price of equipment falling dramatically over the last several years. As a result, the average American consumer has their image recorded by dozens cameras every day.

Here is an example of a typical day, with a running total, and the number of cameras likely present at each stop:

8:00AM: 4 Cameras - Get a cup of coffee - 4 cameras in Starbucks, Dunkin Donuts

8:30AM: 24 Cameras - School or office - cameras in parking lot and interior, you will be picked up at various angles by 20 cameras at least.

12:15PM: 30 Cameras - Stop at ATM before lunch for cash. Bank will have exterior cameras, ATM will have close-up camera

12:30PM: 38 Cameras - Go get lunch - 4 cameras at lunch spot, plus 4 more easily ay surrounding businesses

5:00PM: 45 Cameras - Leave work, go to gym to work out. Camera at check-in desk, plus in 6-8 in workout area

5:45PM: 46 Cameras - Stop to pick up dry cleaning. Camera at front register

6:00PM: 52 Cameras - Stop for gas. Cameras at pumps and in store

6:15PM: 54 Cameras - Quick car wash. Cameras at entry and in-bay

7:00PM: 58 Cameras - Pick up kids from practice/game. Cameras in school parking lot or on building exterior

We have not even included city / traffic cameras and, in urban areas, you will easily be picked up at most prominent intersections and often walking down the street.

Weekends may be a different schedule, but a single trip to the mall or a large shopping plaza can easily have hundreds of cameras in between, and an individual can regularly be caught by dozens of them.

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In addition to commercial locations with cameras, residential systems are becoming more popular, with products like Ring and Yi or NestCam. If you walk the dog around your neighborhood, or go for a morning run, you may pass a half dozen or more cameras.

What Is The Risk To You?

Concerns have already arisen over automated license plate readers and privacy violations, claiming the technology enables wide-spread tracking of a persons movement.

Many people may not be overly concerned if the cameras at their local coffee shop reveled they have a weakness for an afternoon latte, but could be more concerned if their image were easily associated with cameras at a medical facility or treatment center.

Cameras are already increasingly cloud-connected for remote access to video, and several have been shown to be easily hacked. Just because a video system is privately owned does not mean that its recorded video is assured to be publicly inaccessible.

Face-recognition algorithms are advancing, and the full impact of being captured and recorded dozens of times a day may become more significant when the majority of your daily movements can be indexed or searched.

Can You Avoid Exposure?

Aside from staying home with the curtains drawn, there is no easy way to avoid unwanted recording by security cameras, and in US courts have ruled that people do not have an expectation of privacy in public places as it pertains to photography/camera recording (note that audio recording without consent or disclosure is illegal in most areas).