The government of Punjab recently unveiled a controversial update to the Punjab Safe Cities Authority (PSCA) public safety app that can turn citizens’ phones into surveillance devices, with almost no privacy safeguards.
Here is why it can easily turn into a privacy nightmare.
Under the new “PSCA – Public Safety App” update, citizens can now stream live video from their mobile phone cameras directly to the Safe City control room during emergencies. After calling the emergency helpline 15, a user receives a special live-feed link; once opened, their phone camera begins transmitting real-time footage to authorities.
PSCA officials claim the feature will allow faster verification of incidents and quicker dispatch of help, a potentially life-saving tool.
Let’s not ignore the fact that this feature could become a tool for mass surveillance, abuse, and violation of personal privacy. In a country where footage from fixed traffic and enforcement cameras has already leaked or been shared online, giving anyone a “mobile Safe City camera” dramatically increases the risk of abuse.
The Safe City system already uses a vast network of city-wide cameras, number-plate recognition, and, increasingly, facial recognition capabilities. Without clear legal guardrails on who can view, store, or share footage, live streaming introduces a new layer of danger: unchecked collection and potential misuse of personal data.
Turning citizens’ phones into surveillance tools can have many dangers, including:
Real-time video could genuinely help in emergencies: crimes, accidents, medical crises, and situations where a quick visual can help responders act. And in principle, that is a valid use. PSCA itself says the feature is meant only for emergencies, not casual video sharing.
But the danger lies not in the tool itself, but in the lack of clear boundaries, oversight, and accountability. Without transparent rules on footage access, sharing, storage, and deletion, and without legal protections for citizen privacy, the risks may easily outweigh the benefits.
Required safeguards should include:
Otherwise, what is being sold as a public-safety improvement could easily become a pervasive, unregulated surveillance apparatus, turning every citizen’s phone into a camera for monitoring, not for protection.
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