A Canadian filmmaker, Robert Spence, only has one eye. He lost the other one in an accident when he was a teenager. He is only 36 years old, and has been developing his creative talents in the film industry by making documentaries. Now, he can film the whole thing with his prosthetic eye.
The idea of installing a mini camera in his prosthetic eye came to him while filming a documentary about surveillance. So, he and his team created a project called 'Eyeborg.'
"Originally the whole idea was to do a documentary about surveillance. I thought I would become a sort of super hero ... fighting for justice against surveillance," Spence said.
"In Toronto there are 12,000 cameras. But the strange thing I discovered was that people don’t care about the surveillance cameras, they were more concerned about me and my secret camera eye because they feel that is a worse invasion of their privacy."
So now, in addition to asking someone "Are you married?" you have to ensure that both eyes are real and there is no hidden camera in one of them, if the person has a prosthetic.
Eye-Mounted Videocameras
One-Eyed Filmmaker Robert Spence Starts 'Eyeborg Project'
Trend Themes
1. Prosthetic Eye Cameras - The development of mini cameras installed in prosthetic eyes presents disruptive innovation opportunities for the surveillance and filmmaking industries.
2. Privacy Concerns - The public's heightened awareness and concern over privacy invasion due to hidden camera technology opens up disruptive innovation opportunities in the security and personal protection industries.
3. Filming Enhancements - Integrated camera technology within prosthetic eyes offers disruptive innovation opportunities for the film and documentary production industries to capture unique perspectives and immersive storytelling experiences.
Industry Implications
1. Surveillance - The integration of mini cameras in prosthetic eyes can disrupt the surveillance industry by providing inconspicuous and versatile monitoring solutions.
2. Filmmaking - Prosthetic eye cameras enable novel filming techniques and perspectives, disrupting the traditional norms of the filmmaking industry and opening up new creative possibilities.
3. Security - The emergence of hidden camera technology in prosthetic eyes creates disruptive innovation opportunities in the security industry for covert surveillance and threat detection.