Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 04, 1999, Page 6, Image 6

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    Webcams allow view of campus on World Wide Web
The cameras raise slight
concerns about privacy
hut will remain online
By Tricia Schwennesen
Oregon Daily Emerald
People interested in the Univer
sity can get a bird’s-eye view of stu
dents and the campus — right from
the comfort of their own homes.
Anyone can see the University
by visiting several Web sites that
display real-time images from
cameras around campus.
The newest camera peers down
on the Lawrence Hall courtyard
from a third story window in
Allen Hall, relaying images on the
journalism school’s home page at
http:// jcomm.uoregon.edu.
Josh Hough, a senior journalism
major and Webmaster for the jour
nalism school home page, said
the Allen Hall camera is an exper
iment he plans to develop further,
The webcam has been operat
ing for about a month. This self
proclaimed webcam buff said he
got the idea from another Univer
sity webcam operated by Craig
Hickman, associate professor ol
fine and applied arts.
Hickman's camera, which has
been transmitting for nearly five
years, faces north over Franklin
Boulevard from a second story mez
zanine window in Lawrence Hall.
The Lawrence Hall camera
shoots one frame per minute in
color and is broadcast live on the
Internet at http:// camera2.uore
gon.edu/webcam/ webcam. h t m 1.
Hickman said he liked the idea
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of “real time.”
“It’s kind of like magic to see
some place in the world, right
now," Hickman said. "It’s just the
idea that you could see someplace
— maybe a non-special place. It
gives people the opportunity to
see something new.”
Every once in a while, the com
puter network crashes, leaving
the camera disabled. Hickman
said he once received a phone call
from a student’s parent in anoth
er state. The parent was actually
depending on the camera to show
a picture of the student as a sur
prise for his father’s birthday.
“All over the world, every few
minutes, someone from somewhere
is looking at it,” Hickman said. “One
of the things I wanted with my cam
era was a high-quality image. ”
Hough's camera in Allen hall
captures one frame per second —
which is almost full-motion video
compared to other webcams.
Movie videos run at 15 to 30
frames per second.
“You can’t do that on the Inter
net yet because there’s just not
enough speed,” Hough said.
According to an article in the
The Oregonian, webcam technol
ogy is developing more quickly
than online legal regulations or
even ethical concerns.
“I don’t really think there’s any
thing wrong with it unless people
are zooming in on women in their
dorms or something," said Selena
Brewington, a computer science
and information technology major.
Tim Gleason, dean of the journal
ism school, said the webcam is not
an invasion of students’ privacy.
“It’s simply a camera trained on
a public area,” Gleason said.
“They give you a look at the cam
pus — a real-time look at the Uni
versity of Oregon.”
Gleason said Hough’s camera is
not being used for surveillance,
and there are no means of storing
the images.
"It’s as if you walked by that
window right at that moment,”
Gleason said.
Hough said most of the people
he has talked to think the webcam
is neat. Only one person ex
pressed “some slight concern
about privacy,” he said.
“I don’t really agree with that,”
Hough said. “You can’t really see that
much — it's not like you can identify
anyone’s face as they walk by.”
Brewington, Hough and Hick
man all agree that the situation
would be different if webcam
quality was better.
Hickman said he reconsidered
his webcam when he moved of
fices from Lawrence Hall to a
ground-level office on the Mill
Race. But the webcam stayed be
hind in his old office.
"As long as I’ve been looking at
it, I’ve never been able to recog
nize anyone I knew,” Hickman
said.
If the camera was placed on the
ground level, identifying people
who passed by would be easier.
"I’m not sure it would be
wrong, it would just be different,”
Hickman said.
Brewington said he believes we
bcams are just a novelty for people
who like looking at other people.
“The resolution is bad, and you
can’t really tell who’s walking
by,” Brewington said.
Hough said unless he receives
some serious complaints, he will
continue with his webcam experi
ment.
Law
Continued from Page 1
concerned citizens from around
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ence and expertise on an array of
environmental issues.
When the conference started in
the early 1980s, it was a chance for
regional lawyers concerned with
the environment to come together
and network.
Now, the conference draws par
ticipants from more than 40 coun
tries and addresses regional, nation
al and global environmental issues.
This year’s theme, "Fierce
Green Fire,” inspired by the work
of nature writer Aldo Leopold,
links a broad range of environ
mental movements.
“It started legal and local, then
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up, more than ever before. ”
While the conference will have
several new topics and speakers, a
familiar face will open the pro
ceedings.
For the 17th consecutive year,
David Brower, former executive di
rector of the Sierra Club and
founder of Earth Island Institute
and Friends of the Earth, will give
the opening keynote address at 7
p.m. tonight in the EMU Ballroom.
"He is the leading inspiration
behind the environmental move
ment in the latter half of the 20th
century,” said Brett Paben, anoth
er conference co-director.
Julia Butterfly Hill, one of Fri
day’s keynote speakers, is a forest
activist who has been living for
more than a year in an ancient red
wood tree near Stafford, Calif. She
climbed the redwood in December
1997 in an effort to save the tree and
to bring worldwide attention to the
destruction she saw occurring in
old-growth forests.
Because Hill won’t come down
from the tree, she will be giving
her speech over the phone. She’ll
be part of three keynote speeches
from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Friday in the
EMU Ballroom.
Controversial issues addressed
at the conference will include
panels and presentations on the
validity of eco-sabotage, the possi
bilities of optimum population
policies, the Y2K problem in nu
clear facilities and the Makah
whaling controversy.
In addition to the many panels,
presentations and speakers at the
conference, films, music and na
ture walks will also be available to
participants.
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