• plz1@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Yeah, the down side is you need to be in the camera’s field of view to do this, outing themselves.

  • BigFig@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Just remember that lasers literally point back at you. So if you are recorded by any other camera they will see exactly who or what vehicle did this. If it’s a strong enough laser it’s likely a visible beam too so in a crowd it will be extremely obvious who is pointing it.

    • Postmortal_Pop@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      So back in the day the way you’d burn out a security camera was to swap out the diode in a pointer with a CD/dvd burner laser. They’re practically invisible and can pop baloons or start fires from about 50ft. Then the real trick is to get underneath the camera, you can reach just into the field of view and the lens will make sure enough of it gets to the camera to damage it. To an uninformed observer it just looks like you’re trying to light a smoke or tie a shoe or check a text.

      Things have changed since then, but I can’t imagine that much.

  • Aberration13@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    I am pretty sure that at that wattage it would not be able to significantly destroy them, you could burn out pixels in the camera but unless you want to stand there for 10+ minutes shining it on the lens I don’t think you’re going to significantly hamper the vision system.

    It needs to be more powerful than a class 4 consumer grade device.

    Not that you can’t do it, but if you want to do it more effectively I am pretty sure something stronger would be required than a 1 watt device, Ideally you would want something that can just melt the photoreceptor entirely.

    To further your efficacy you might want to use something in a wavelength range that is invisible to most cameras since any footage prior to melting is probably still saved somewhere and available to police. No visible beam means it’s significantly harder to pin it on you.Be warned however lasers in that intensity are very dangerous to eyesight and even incidental beam reflections off surfaces can cause damage to eyesight almost immediately, compounding that by making it a wavelength invisible to cameras you are also making it invisible to human eyes making it even easier to accidentally blind yourself without the right eye protection. Though it would be more difficult to aim if you can’t see it (there are ways around this as well such as buying a small camera that can see that wavelength and hooking it up to a video feed you use to aim it, potentially an in glasses screen (these are becoming much cheaper and readily available these days) as now you can order glasses to protect from that wavelength and put the lenses over your screen glasses and see exactly where you are pointing it without any risk of eye damage and very minimal risk of being caught.

  • taiyang@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    You know all the posts about lasers… but has anyone just tried an adequately sized rock?