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- 40% of households say crime is down
- Online hub launched to track crime
- Housebreaking the most common crime
- Crime down but household burglary up
- Stolen iPhone leads cops to thief
- Crime rate low on Durban beaches
- Ryk 'saddened' by burglary
- Business pleased with drop in crime
- Pat Symcox's home burgled
- Tshwane paying millions for CCTV
- CCTV in taxis is ruled unlawful
- CCTV System Effectiveness
- AfriForum steps up for police reservists
- Shout SA shooting new video
- R170m to upgrade Zuma home
- The impact of cameras on crime
- Crime, graft fight gaining ground
- Guard robbed minister to prove lax security
- Does your home's security match your theft policy
- Crime stats to be released
- Robbers attack more frequently - cops
- SA hosts stolen luxury car frenzy
- Fight against organised copper crime syndicate intensifies
- South African-built drone to fly in 2012
- Businesses still fret over crime despite a 35% drop
- New technology to guard your assets
- Financial impact of crime still number one concern for commercial SME'S
- New security cameras to record crime hot spots in Hagerstown.
- Crime levels declining
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- Make private expenses for crime prevention tax deductible.
- Serious crackdown on rural crime.
- Home security tips.
- More fire prevention responsibility falls on management.
- Thief caught on camera stealing iPad from security conference.
- Preventing crime, school security high on agenda.
- Woman's murder captured on CCTV.
- Crime, accidents down in Joburg
- Demand for home security systems to grow 27 per cent over three years
- Retail crime "considerably" down
- Increase in crime prevention allocation welcomed: BACSA
- Poor pay, lack of training turn guards into criminals
- Increase in crime after World Cup
- Recipe to fight crime not a secret
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- Home security systems and property for sale.
- CCTV Footage helps nab crooks
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- Holiday Home Security Checklist
- Home Security
- Armed robbers caught on CCTV
- Authorities to study CCTV footage to identify Samwu vandals
- Your home, your sanctuary?
- Retirement home security scrutinised following murder
- Crime statistics in South Africa
- Give us the latest crime statistics!
- Understand how criminals think
- Criminals Escape - Electric fence switched off
- Fire safety rules, emergency response plan critical!
New technology to guard your assets
If criminals can bypass alarm systems, armed-guard patrols and safe codes – microdotting might be the technology needed to make a dent in car hijackings and the theft of valuable goods.
A cutting edge and growing form of asset protection, microdotting – where items of value are dotted with a unique identification number – has been touted to help reduce the high levels of vehicle theft and hijackings.
This is a “relatively” new technology in South Africa, expected to be passed into law early next year.
The microdots make it easier to identify a recovered vehicle, apart from using the vehicle’s identification number (VIN).
People will still be able to “retrofit” their vehicles, as well as their assets.
Eddie Mokhoanatse, spokesman for Microdot SA, one of the leaders in the campaign for the technology, said microdots were useful in the fight against vehicle, household and business crimes.
“As long as an asset has the microdot, it can be traced to the rightful and legitimate owner and it will be harder for the parts to be resold,” he said.
Microdots, he said, can also be applied to items such as laptops and diamond rings. The tiny dots – the size of a pin head – are applied using an ultraviolet adhesive. It contains a microscopic 17-digit laser-etched VIN or PIN to identify an asset and, in turn, its owner.
This number is only visible through a magnifying lens under an ultraviolet light. The asset is then registered under the owner’s name on a national database so that if it is stolen, it can be identified and returned. There is a once-off fee and no monthly instalments or subscriptions, according to Microdot SA.
Mokhoanatse said microdots had been found to be useful overseas. The US, Australia and New Zealand have been widely using this technology for several years. Sean Peterson, an independent agent for Veridot, another supplier of the microdot system, also said electronic equipment such as televisions and cellphones could be marked.
“Signs warning that items have been marked with microdots serve as a deterrence to criminals,” he said. Louise Taljaard, general manager of The Vehicle Security Association of South Africa (Vesa), said microdots were useful for the identification of vehicles that lay in chop shops, that had been stolen or found as being stolen at road blocks.
“Only one dot is required to identify the original owner of the part or vehicle and that is what makes this standard so well accepted by crime prevention bodies,” she said. Taljaard said there were companies going through the Vesa-audit process, which would provide the vehicle safety industry with more approved service providers to microdot vehicles
Source : iol.co.za , The Independent on Saturday - ARTHI SANPATH August 2 2011
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