In my apartment’s laundry, there is what appears to be a security camera (it might be fake). Someone has placed a crumpled sticker over the plastic sheathed lens. It has been like this for months, and nobody has ever removed it (it’s not even fastened securely or elegantly, it would take half a minute to remove).
Security footage generated by the myriad surveillance devices in our world, depending on length of storage, is great for ‘after the fact’ deduction. But for the majority the security cameras, most of the time serve as ‘scare-person’ — a signifier that someone, somewhere is watching and if something goes wrong ‘help’ or ‘force’ will be summoned. Of course, someone is rarely watching and so help (or hindrance depending on what you’re trying to do) is rarely on its way.
The world is littered with these ‘scare-people’ only slightly more elegant than the farmer’s old clothes stuffed with straw to shoo away hungry birds. They work insofar as they help people feel safe or corralled, and enforcement (at best) is a roulette wheel like gambling mechanic that makes these work; 9/10, 99/100 there is nothing behind the glamour of saftey/control save for that odd time where security would be summoned.
Does the door really start an alarm if it’s opened? (I find this actually rarer than you might think despite not having much opportunity to test… I suspect these doors are often much like my hyper-vigilant smoke alarms that probably get disabled rather quickly due to the frustration of false positives). Does the unknown company have a case and money for legal fees behind the cease and desist letter? Are there human eyes staring at a screen linked to the video camera? What happens when you venture past?
It’s an interesting game I play from time to time, to look around and figure out where the scare-people abound and how they tilt my behavior this way or that. I think it’s even more fascianting when the scare-people are placed not to encourage lawful behavior, but done in such a way to glower & cow the hoi polloi away from exercising their rights/claiming what is by rights theirs (most commonly by the myriad attempts to in some way privatize what is public space).
I find my world has far more ‘anti-traps’ than traps.