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Deflock hits 100k ALPRs Mapped in USA

think of me as the stupidest person on the planet and explain to my how a flock camera is violation of privacy

2 minutes agovivzkestrel

Nice to see some pushback in the most egregious abuses of privacy. I wonder why we are getting this with Flock but not seeing the same with private security cameras such as Ring, pervasive tracking of mobile devices by carriers and apps, and internet browser tracking. Is it just that there's a direct personal benefit with those devices, and people view the trade-off as being worth it?

10 hours agoSoftTalker

I don’t think people realize that these devices can even be used that way. I talk with people outside of the tech scene frequently, and they are routinely surprised when I tell them about this sort of capability. The ring doorbell Super Bowl commercial about finding lost dogs was a genuine shock to people! I think there’s a degree of visibility you need to get people’s attention on an issue, and it’s just difficult to see a doorbell as a threat for the average person.

9 hours agomalwrar

It's not just inputs/sensors but also outputs. It seems like every public space is abused with bright obnoxious digital billboards now the cost is cheaper and cheaper.

14 minutes agobrikym

Ring is dead near me. Everyone had Ring doorbells until someone went around with a hammer and fucked them all up.

6 hours agocryo32

Wish that same person would do something about obnoxious digital billboards

20 minutes agobrikym

Honey, did you order a ski mask and a hammer because someone is delivering them now according to the cam... nevermind.

3 hours agoEdwardDiego

Surely one of the cameras saw who it was...?

4 hours agosmcg

I'm picturing someone dressed up as MC hammer blasting hammer time on a speaker

17 minutes agobrikym

It didn't happen

3 hours agobatch12

balaclava

4 hours agocryo32

[dead]

2 hours agosieabahlpark

Ring did get some pushback when they advertised the "pet finding" feature that folks realized meant would allow anybody to be found.

But overall, being tracked by your _own_ device feels different than being tracked by somebody else's device. Especially when taxpayer dollars are being used for that other device.

an hour agopunkyblewster

> Is it just that there's a direct personal benefit with those devices, and people view the trade-off as being worth it?

I think that's mostly it. Basically since Flocks only use is for the systematic tracking of people for use by police and government agencies, it's a lot easier to get people to turn against it. There's just no upside to them that any individual would ever benefit from.

It's sad because if/when Flock dies the death of deserves, the software/infrastructure will likely just get sold off and reapplied to some other deployment scheme like Ring quietly forgoing the big Superbowl Ad.

9 hours agorigrassm

I so want to push back that all this is too little too late, because the system ,though still distributed , is effectively in place already. But.. I also don't want to be the old guy telling kids not to rebel. After all, being young and thinking ( knowing! ) one can change the world, is what being young human is all about. FWIW, it may well be their version of decss, ows and so on.

On the other hand, come to think of it, despite OWS being broken up by fancy new approaches ( rumor has it, Walls Street got spooked enough to see what effective methods can be employed given that Pinkerton approach would have been frowned upon then ), I don't recall FBI marking the participants in any special way ( please correct me if I am missting anything ).

9 hours agoiugtmkbdfil834

With a nationwide effort in swing to dismantle corporate surveillance, the follow up is to pass legislation state by state that prohibits its implementation in the future. Federal legislation on this matter is unlikely to occur until sometime after midterms, and so state legislation is the path to success in the interim.

8 hours agotoomuchtodo

We voted out the cameras locally, the feds just installed them at every nook and cranny they had available. Turned out, there was a lot of federal property, so it was back to square one.

8 hours agomothballed

Regime change is coming, its harm reduction until then.

8 hours agotoomuchtodo

There are a host of issues that the dems are better on (assuming one agrees on what better means), but I don't think they're particularly better on this issue. One can point to pro-privacy outliers on both sides, but we're not likely to get one of them as the final candidate in 2028.

3 hours agoOctoth0rpe

A Democrat has won almost every election since the presidential election [1] [2]. It is a referendum on this administration imho, and based on all available data and evidence, I expect it to continue.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46990619 (citations)

[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46864405 (citations)

I expect Dems to be better on privacy in this context ("We don't need ALPRs because privacy is more important than faux threats conjured up to sell corporate surveillance to the masses for institutional shareholder returns") because you're more likely to be fear driven as a Republican/conservative (and therefore, support invasion of privacy via ALPRs despite facts and statistics around the risk) due to a larger amygdala (where fear processing takes place) [3] and amygdala–BNST connectivity [4], but of course some Dems will disappoint on this policy topic. You might even be able to suss out confidence in policy implementation using photos of candidates [5], which can predict political orientation (and therefore, brain structure).

[3] Kanai R, Feilden T, Firth C ... Political Orientations Are Correlated with Brain Structure in Young Adults Current Biology, 2011; 21, 677-680 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2011.03.017

[4] Pedersen WS, Muftuler LT, Larson CL. Conservatism and the neural circuitry of threat: economic conservatism predicts greater amygdala-BNST connectivity during periods of threat vs safety. Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2018 Jan 1;13(1):43-51. doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsx133. PMID: 29126127; PMCID: PMC5793824.

[5] Kosinski, M., Khambatta, P., & Wang, Y. (2024). Facial recognition technology and human raters can predict political orientation from images of expressionless faces even when controlling for demographics and self-presentation. American Psychologist, 79(7), 942–955. https://doi.org/10.1037/amp0001295

3 hours agotoomuchtodo

Are you sure about that? Seems pretty shameless and determined to bend all the rules to stay in power, I surely hope the change is coming though.

5 hours agotartoran

Dem advantage heading into midterms is highest in 20 years [1]. I am hopeful if democracy is directly attacked during the upcoming election cycle, the attempt will be contained, but agree it remains to be seen and you should have an exit plan if democracy fails.

Mental model: I am sure of nothing. All models are wrong, but some are useful. Better to have a plan and not need it than need it and not have it. Hope alone is not a strategy.

[1] https://emersoncollegepolling.com/april-2026-national-poll/

5 hours agotoomuchtodo

Dont forget about Waymo and similar. As much surveillance as flock.

3 hours agotreebeard901

Does Waymo track individuals for businesses and governments?

If so, I'll stop using them. If they just happen to need cameras, that's fundamentally different.

an hour agopunkyblewster

It's not much of a stretch to think they'd sell the data or be compelled to given the NSA and data brokers exist.

10 minutes agobrikym

Bugs me no end that my latest upstairs neighbor (I've been here for 15 years) has a ring on their door which means I have to be in front of it every time I go in & out my own door.

It doesn't matter how thoughtful you are, someone else will be thoughtless for you.

3 hours agoBrian_K_White

There is some push on that too but Flock is sponsored by people's taxes, while ring is someone's personal choice.

5 hours agoPunchyHamster

>the most egregious abuses of privacy

wait until you hear about EU's EES

8 hours agonenadg

do you really believe your biometrics being checked once when you enter a continent as a foreigner is the same as being videotaped at every moment in your own country as a citizen?

8 hours agoriffraff

How is this data storage even legal? I mean having cameras out that will sound an alarm if one of N specific wanted cars pass by is one thing. But do these cars just store stuff for later use and abuse? Who approved that?

7 hours agoalkonaut

They aren’t and no one legitimately did. This is extrajudicial surveillance state stuff

7 hours agoSOLAR_FIELDS

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6 hours agoclear-octopus

The 100k figure is an overestimate by a few percent. The OpenStreetMap data for ALPRs is pretty good, but there is some duplication. I (recently) programmatically identified ~2.5k such instances. https://pickpj.github.io/Mapping/FIock/similar.html It has openstreetmap links attached for those who want to help fix the data.

7 hours agogentile

Nice work all. But am quite unhappy with their new map. Doesn’t work with my hardened machine with webgl off or my old phone. For some obscure reason, the button to try the “legacy” map (from last month) does not come up most of the time. So several times recently the site has been inaccessible to me.

7 hours agomixmastamyk

It's ironic seeing this here since Flock is YCombinator company.

8 hours agocuriousgal

Surveillance and privacy invasion is profitable, so not ironic at all.

7 hours agoRefreeze5224

I dunno if it is ironic. Most of us recognize that technology itself is a tool. It can be used in any number of ways including ones in which some portions of the population may disagree with.

8 hours agoiugtmkbdfil834

I don't know about that, nothing about their pitch indicated anything but what their technology is currently used for.

8 hours agocuriousgal

I will give you a weird, but current, example. TSLA ( and virtually all companies that center on Musk as its director -- in the original sense of the word before HR title inflation took it down ) may say one thing about what the plan for the tech is, but, even occasional review of their positioning shows that the "what their technology is currently used for" is in near constant flux. Honestly, the fact that his investors keep rewarding it is beyond me.

8 hours agoiugtmkbdfil834

I see all the Lowe’s in my area are Flock’ed up.

Home Depot from now on.

an hour agoSV_BubbleTime

near me it’s the Hone Depot, not Lowes, that has the flocks

44 minutes agorootusrootus

(It's Home Despot and Blowe's)

7 minutes agoJKCalhoun

this is great. I mean I'm all for the argument in the abstract. my commute is 2.5 miles one way, and I get tagged 20 times in each direction. that kind of brings it home.

10 hours agoconvolvatron
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7 hours ago

Speed cameras next. They’re just revenue generators and part of a safetyism Trojan horse for surveillance.

8 hours agoSilverElfin

They definitely slowed drivers down in San Francisco: data was released proving it.

5 hours agoderwiki

Source? My understanding is that speeding cameras and flock cameras are different in the SF application at least.

5 hours agometasyn

My response was about speed cameras not flock cameras. They added them on Chavez, Ocean, and a few other places.

3 hours agoderwiki

Slowing drivers isn’t a good thing. It’s just making lives worse by adding travel time when people could move faster. But my point remains - speed cameras are a backdoor surveillance method. They can be subpoenaed.

an hour agoSilverElfin

Speed cameras save lives. It's best when they're paired with:

- good publicity (drivers know that speed cameras exist)

- density (high chance of passing a speed camera)

- enforcement of penalties (if fines can be ignored then they lose their deterrent effect)

- portable (so you don't know where they are ahead of time)

3 hours agorahimnathwani

They also enable mass surveillance and they also unnecessarily reduce quality of life. No one talks about the time lost to artificially low speed limits. But they do matter.

an hour agoSilverElfin

Speed cameras enable efficient enforcement of existing speed limits. They don't require 'artificially low speed limits'.

Speed cameras don't have to enable mass surveillance. The oldest ones are detect a speeding object and take two photos at a fixed interval. Cars that aren't speeding aren't recorded.

an hour agorahimnathwani

The senior director of connectivity there is former IDF.

Probably nothing.

9 hours agokumarski

Since military service is mandatory in Israel, it means that basically any Israeli (with the exception of Hasidic Jews), male or female, is, not by choice, ex-IDF. It isn't a signal of their choices, or willing participation, just of where they were born.

If you don't know this, now you do. If you knew this already...

7 hours agosnovv_crash

That's not my problem. Why wasn't he fired after the vulnerability was revealed? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vU1-uiUlHTo

Does IDF service mean their position is immune to valid criticism of the job?

How do we know as Americans that it's secure when the individual who is senior and leading connectivity has likely served a foreign intelligence agency/millitary?

Is this not alarming as videos weren't encrypted and public?

6 hours agokumarski

Seems like a good reason to not hire Israelis. Maligned unamerican interests shouldn't sit in the top ranks of surveillance tech.

6 hours agothrowawa1

It is their choice.

If they had any spine they'd kill themselves, instead they comply and engage with the IDF and its war crimes.

If anything, this should mean to avoid corruption and engaging with war criminals, we should bar all Israelis from US roles.

Same should apply to any ex-Russian military, any foreign ex-intelligence too. This isn't a harsh take.

3 hours agoHDBaseT