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    1. > The Milwaukee case surfaced because the woman did something most drivers never think to do. She checked a public website called Have I Been Flocked, a transparency tool that lets people see whether automated plate readers have scanned their vehicle. What she found laid bare just how closely one officer had been watching where she went.

      Shoutout to tools like Have I Been Flocked and Have I Been Pwned.

    2. DringleDringle on

      One is legally allowed to remove their license plate when parked on private property, correct? I’d remove line every time, especially if I was a woman.

    3. No matter how many times you see it denied study after study shows mass surveillance has little impact on crime. It is always inevitably weaponized against the public by government and cooperate agents.

    4. No matter how many times you see it denied study after study shows mass surveillance has little impact on crime. It is always inevitably weaponized against the public by government and cooperate agents.

    5. In my opinion the existence of this survelliance net alone should be classified as stalking. Never mind when somebody actually logs in to do so.

    6. highlyspecificuser on

      Surveillance cameras, not traffic cameras.
      They keep pushing cameras left and right to “protect us”, but make no mistake about it, it’s all about control. Imagine, if one police officer can do this, imagine the power of federal agencies…

    7. They should have each search unexecutable unless tied to a case number that has to be entered.

    8. californiaKid420 on

      Does it physically hurt to have your license plate scanned I don’t understand?…

    9. National_Spirit2801 on

      I was arrested after being logged by flock cameras in my city; it was the creepiest fucking big brother moment of my life.

    10. 987YouBloodyTulip789 on

      We now live in an era where anyone with a badge now knows everywhere you go, and the only punishment for being caught is resigning and moving to a new police station. 

      We now live in an Orwell police state. Not like a decade or two ago where big tech companies were collecting aggregate data for advertising purposes, or being seen by a CCTV camera that erases its footage after a few days because of memory limitations which itself was bringing up concerns. But your licence plate and face being scanned, saved, and used against you if Big Brother wants to.

    11. There is a ton of people who have no idea what flock cameras are. I like to enlighten them.

    12. notaredditer13 on

      Not „allowed“, just not caught until he got caught (and fired). 

      Obviously oversight is needed but it won’t be possible to completely eliminate abuse of such systems. 

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