affluent area of the city places most notifications and is cleanest as result
    they use an app for it
    automation might make things more equal, leading to more trust in the city
contestability privileging most resourceful citizens isn't necessarily an issue if system changes benefit whole city
contestability loop in video is labor intensive
comparison to civil servants who respond to freedom of information requests and who are two years behind
pilots are one thing, implementation is completely different and more involved
tenders are three years and limit what can be done
less thought is given to monitoring and maintenance and long term consequences
hard to predict what challenges will be before you actually try implementation (e.g. event calendar for shutter cam at arena)
even for employees city is a complicated organization internally
it should be very clear for citizens where they can go with a question or a comment
explanations should be part of smart objects in public space
    hard to be comprehensive without information overload
    not clear what the right channel should be
    people seem to care more about what happens to data collected rather than sensor in and of itself
    transparency information also makes people think they need to act on it (e.g. people counter that shows number)
    maybe people just need to get used to it
comfort with smart technology might be generational, young people are more suspicious
suspicion might also vary from area to area and context to context depending on the stakes
