Flock, the automatic license plate reader (ALPR) company, exposed some of the license plate cops were looking for and the reason for doing so.
artyom@piefed.socialEnglish
4 daysIm shocked that the company who was openly broadcasting live feeds to the public internet also exposed the details of searches!
- neclimdul@lemmy.worldEnglish3 days
Do I detect a faint hint of sarcasm? Surely not because not even Nostradamus could have predicted such a shocking twist.
- 4 days
Remember it’s not just a license plate reader. There should be a law against calling it that.
- 4 days
They don’t just read license plates. They analyze faces/pets/distinctive clothing to ID people, scan nearby WiFi and Bluetooth signals to track devices, scan distinctive features of vehicles (dents, scratches, bumper stickers, etc) to track them even without a clear license plate, etc… Calling it a license plate reader vastly downplays their capabilities.
It’s like someone calling a fully automatic high-powered machine gun “a rabbit-hunting gun”. Sure it could be used to shoot rabbits, but that’s vastly understating the capabilities.
- Doublenut@lemmy.zipEnglish4 days
Atlanta has them in the middle of parks too far from and facing away from parking lots to read any license plates… they’re there to use facial recognition on children playing on park equipment.
- ironycanal@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish4 days
Oh wow.this is just blatantly anti-police. You think cops shouldn’t get to masturbate, just because they’re cops?
- ironycanal@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish3 days
Then where. You can’t really be asking them to get out of their cars!
Vandals_handle@lemmy.worldEnglish
3 daysBy the dumpster in the alley behind Arby’s. But not the Arby’s on main, the one over across the tracks by the pulp mill.
- cheesemoo@lemmy.worldEnglish4 days
And they probably sold the people in charge on the idea that it’s to “protect the children” 🤮
tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish
4 daysIt’s good to point this out, I don’t drive but I forget they could probably track my bike still based on it’s distinctiveness, calling them license plate readers really does obscure the insidiousness well. We’ve heard about automatic license plate readers for years, they weren’t like this so it is really disingenuous to call them such.
MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 daysoh yeah. like, if the police in town have figured out who i am from my trike, there’s no way the ALPR hasn’t. that thing is fucking distinctive. and i wave hi to everyone (the ALPRs with one finger)
- 4 days
It used to be finger prints people needed to worry about. It so far beyond that now.
MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 daysground squirrels. we use the atf tag (it’s not mine, i don’t know what it’s called) machine gun to hunt ground squirrels. i mean you have to kill them for environmental regulation and agricultural control anyways, might as well have some fun.
Leon@pawb.socialEnglish
4 daysThey’re little computers with cameras that capture everything. I think some of these types of devices run Android. Many are very poorly secured, like the article suggests. A “license plate reader” sounds like it only reads license plates, these are surveillance platforms, with cameras and microphones. They can be accessed remotely to do more than just read a license plate.
I’m thinking the person says that couching it as a license plate reader is disingenuous, because it doesn’t really convey the gravity of what the devices are capable of.
- greyscale@lemmy.grey.oooEnglish4 days
They’re Android. And they’re hella insecure. And hilariously jankilly implemented. I’d be ashamed if this was my states state surveillance infrastructure.
Related videos:
- extremeboredom@lemmy.worldEnglish4 days
Yes, ALPR is a term used for the purpose of public relations. It does not accurately describe the technology.
- deadcream@sopuli.xyzEnglish4 days
Any “license plate reader” has a camera and can be used for anything. This was true before flock.
- 4 days
I didn’t know “any license plate reader” also scanned your phone as you went by and added your dog to their database to better identify you as an individual.
They don’t just read license plates. They analyze faces/pets/distinctive clothing to ID people, scan nearby WiFi and Bluetooth signals to track devices, scan distinctive features of vehicles (dents, scratches, bumper stickers, etc) to track them even without a clear license plate, etc… Calling it a license plate reader vastly downplays their capabilities.
It’s like someone calling a fully automatic high-powered machine gun “a rabbit-hunting gun”. Sure it could be used to shoot rabbits, but that’s vastly understating the capabilities.
- FauxLiving@lemmy.worldEnglish4 days
‘Can be’ and ‘are’ are two completely different categories of things.
- deadcream@sopuli.xyzEnglish4 days
You think USA government agencies never thought of using public surveillance cameras to spy on people before now? That’s like basic stuff for any domestic security agency, in any country. The only difference is that now the data is shared with regular police with all the incompetence and abuse it implies. You have always been spied on.
- FauxLiving@lemmy.worldEnglish4 days
You think USA government agencies never thought of using public surveillance cameras to spy on people before now?
No. I do not.
I think allowing a private company access to that kind of data, without any meaningful restrictions on what they can do with it, is a lot different than the current situation of ‘spy agencies can spy for the government’.
If I’m a bad guy and I can get access to a Flock (or Palantir, fed by Flock) subscription then I can do bad guy things a lot more effectively. Can you think of any bad guys who could afford such a subscription?
Who owns that data and what rules it falls under is important. The government needs a warrant to obtain cell-site location tracking data, but Flock can sell a subscription to obtain that same data to anybody who can clear an ACH transfer.
Zen_Shinobi@lemmy.worldEnglish
4 daysOn top of what everyone else saod, FLOCK can track your vehicle as you cross several plus states. I would say 90% if not more highways and freeways have them across the US.
Cool tool for stopping real crininals, bad tool on a civil rights side.
- Talcosis@lemmy.zipEnglish4 days
Pretty much everyone is a real criminal, it’s just that most crimes are so minor that they are ignored (see: jaywalking, speeding, putting ice cream in your pocket). In some cases, the laws exist to provide a fig leaf for the powers that be when they want to fuck with someone.
- 4 days
People don’t understand “real” criminal in deeply intertwined with regular people and regular cops and politicians. Most “regular” naive people think of criminals as some mythical thing but they are everywhere. It’s almost as if the “straight” legal life is mirrored 1 to 1 with the dark side. And that part of maintaining the “legal” side is to market that the dark side is a myth, even though is there, part of the “legal” sides politics, economy, and culture.
- psx_crab@lemmy.zipEnglish4 days
This is basically what happened when people whine about the authority only take action when crime are commited. So now everyone are being watched in every corner.
- 4 days
Idk even know if it’s that. This system works people against each other. They create the barrel of crabs and profit off all the bullshit as people claw their way out to get to the rights that a human should naturally have.
Everything is business. And suffering creates reason. It’s a system.
- extremeboredom@lemmy.worldEnglish4 days
It uses machine learning algorithms to identify vehicles independently of the license plate. Leaked documentation has also shown they operate facial recognition tech, in direct contradiction to the lies they tell the public. Flock is fundamentally an evil company, delivering the infrastructure for totalitarian rule, wrapped in the alluring false promise of eliminating crime. They know exactly what they are doing, which is why they are so heartily embraced by fascists in government, from the top all the way down.
- 4 days
So the people that like these don’t mind their own privacy being invaded? Perhaps they already know if caught doing something they will get a free pass?
- extremeboredom@lemmy.worldEnglish4 days
Generally the ones putting them in are on the side of the system that gets a free pass wherever they go. And the majority of the public that allows it to happen fall for the “nothing to hide, nothing to fear” fallacy.
pelespirit@sh.itjust.worksEnglish
4 daysDude, I think you’re misunderstanding. i really wanted to understand. Thankfully Lemmy is awesome, and now I do.
artyom@piefed.socialEnglish
4 daysThey’re just public cameras. They’re notoriously used to capture and record the locations of vehicles via their license plates but realistically they totally could flip a switch and start using them for things like facial recognition overnight.
- Taleya@aussie.zoneEnglish4 days
The irony of this site demanding data from me in order to read the article
FundMECFS@piefed.zipEnglish
3 daysI agree I find 404media‘s soft paywall really annoying. They say they do it to stop LLMs training on their site but I think it‘s just really annoying for actual users.
- ironycanal@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish4 days
I don’t understand. Don’t you want to feel known? Understood?
- Ragallos@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish4 days
I respect and support your eldritch nature, I hope you inspire madness to those who gaze upon your incomprehensible being.
Damn also happy Cake day












