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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
LEOs be careful out there.
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<blockquote data-quote="JacobDaddy" data-source="post: 2681947" data-attributes="member: 7280"><p>There is also another potential problem that I want to throw into the mix here.</p><p></p><p>Body cams, like dash cameras, are subject to Open Records Act. That means that the police department has to keep every moment recorded for 7 years. With hundreds of officers and cameras/incidents being recorded, the raw storage, backup (potential hard drive failure) and chain of custody tracking of these videos, plus the copying of these videos for investigations, ORA and media requests this can cause potential problems for departments both large and small. There will also be hardware failures and other things to consider.</p><p></p><p>Technology is never as simple as it seems once it is scaled up, I deal with medium to large infrastructure daily.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JacobDaddy, post: 2681947, member: 7280"] There is also another potential problem that I want to throw into the mix here. Body cams, like dash cameras, are subject to Open Records Act. That means that the police department has to keep every moment recorded for 7 years. With hundreds of officers and cameras/incidents being recorded, the raw storage, backup (potential hard drive failure) and chain of custody tracking of these videos, plus the copying of these videos for investigations, ORA and media requests this can cause potential problems for departments both large and small. There will also be hardware failures and other things to consider. Technology is never as simple as it seems once it is scaled up, I deal with medium to large infrastructure daily. [/QUOTE]
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