178 pointsby jhonovich3 hours ago14 comments
  • Avshaloman hour ago
    >>Flock and law enforcement regularly cite documented cases where LPR helped solve violent crimes, recover stolen vehicles, and locate missing persons. Those outcomes are real.

    My opposition wouldn't change regardless but are those outcomes real?

    • Manuel_Dan hour ago
      In Seattle at least, the majority of homicide cases are solved with the assistance of surveillance cameras (though what % of said cameras are specifically Flock, I'm not sure): https://spdblotter.seattle.gov/2026/03/05/new-analysis-rtcc-...
      • asveikau42 minutes ago
        Cops can politely ask owners of private cameras for access for things like murder investigation. If the polite answer is no (most people will say yes), they can go to court for a subpoena. This has happened for a long time. This is how it should work. If the cops are too lazy or chicken to ask a judge while investigating a murder, they don't deserve the footage.
        • Manuel_D40 minutes ago
          Right and what if lots of crime happens in a place where there are not many businesses? Hardly an implausible scenario given that crime is bad for business.

          The city can set up its own camera for its own use. Is that really that wild of a proposal?

          • LocalH2 minutes ago
            That is not this, however. This is the city hooking into a private, nationwide surveillance network.

            You didn't think these cities actually own these Flock cameras, did you?

          • asveikau39 minutes ago
            What if what if what if?

            That whole premise of "what if lots of crime happens" -- already false.

            Did you know that most places in America are at historically low crime rates in most of our lifetimes? It is garbage to say this needs deep societal focus right now. I don't give a shit about the hypothetical hurt feelings of small town cops whining that they don't have always-on spy equipment.

          • etchalona minute ago
            In America, yes.

            Obviously in other places, no.

          • chmod7759 minutes ago
            What if lots of murders happened in bathrooms?
            • Manuel_D6 minutes ago
              The hopefully we'll be able to at least narrow down the list of suspects to the people who entered the bathroom around the time they the murder took place.

              Surveillance often doesn't directly capture crime on camera, but is rather used to identify who traveled to and from the crime scene around the time of the incident

      • Avshalom22 minutes ago
        That's not what that says though.

        >technology and professional analysts with helping detectives make arrests in 53%

        "technology and analysts" "help" "make arrests" not surveillance, not convictions and only the implication that they wouldn't have made the arrest otherwise.

        Like look at the example: somebody calls in an OD and a guy sees that the dude ODing matches (the clothing of) a suspect in some other crime and so they arrest him.

        Once again an arrest is not a conviction but also what part of that needed/used pervasive surveillance?

        ALSO a conviction is not the same thing as truth.

        ALSO ALSO by basic subtraction the panopticon wasn't even helpful 47% of the time.

    • mingus88an hour ago
      I have no doubt that provided a vast camera network covering every ingress and egress into a city, and every major intersection, plus a database of when and where a license plate was last seen, cops can find their suspect

      It used to be that news articles would claim that the police used “CCTV from local businesses” to catch a crook. Even back then I knew this was cover for Ring, Flock and who knows what else. they just didn’t want the bad press.

      At this point you don’t need to be a conspiracy theorist to understand that parallel construction happens all the time. They have more tools that we know about, and they want to keep it that way.

      Everyone should throw some money to 404 media. They are independent and doing the best work right now to keep these things in the public eye.

    • rolph38 minutes ago
      guess what prolific career criminals do with crime cars?

      they look for a car that is very similar if not exact make and model of thier stolen vehicle, then they "clone" the victims license plate with a sheet of embossment copper and a stylus, apply paint at thier shop and affix the imposter to the crime vehicle. that buggers the whole LPR thing.

      they can replicate dozens of plates in a day and offer the service for contras.

      • Avshalom13 minutes ago
        That seems like a lot of effort when you can just take the license plate off and if you're really worried print off a convincing temporary license and tape in the back window.
        • rolph7 minutes ago
          [delayed]
    • apothegman hour ago
      The AI slop in that quote sure is real.
  • arjie42 minutes ago
    Ultimately, there’s a sort of homeostasis in people’s tolerance for crime. If you need video evidence for prosecution, those who want it prosecuted will produce video cameras. If you make warrants impossible to produce in a timely manner, the camera search will be warrant exempted.

    Attempts to damage state power to ensure crime isn’t prosecuted will be likely met with methods that are immune to them.

    Given the constraints we operate under, the ideal number of unsolved crimes is not zero and the ideal number of crimes committed using state apparatus is also not zero. So being informed that either is non-zero is not of use to decision making in my opinion.

  • gattr33 minutes ago
    Remember that scene from "Men in Black" where K watches surveillance video feed of his ex? In the movie it was meant to be wistful and cute, I guess. Now that such systems are getting closer to reality, you realize the potential for abuse in enormous.
  • willis9362 hours ago
    Check your town's website for correspondence with your state's chapter of the ACLU in regards to Flock cameras. If your police chief (not an elected official) is installing them then contact your local ACLU chapter about it. These are 4th amendment violations.
    • Manuel_Dan hour ago
      To the contrary, little of what Flock does would be restricted by the 4th amendment. The cameras are in public, and neither the government nor individual citizens need authorization to film people in public.

      Many Flock cameras are also privately owned, too.

      • hilariouslyan hour ago
        https://www.wired.com/story/carpenter-v-united-states-suprem... https://www.eff.org/cases/us-v-jones There has been plenty of past rulings that indicate long term collection of data is not something that the fourth amendment had baked in.
        • Manuel_Dan hour ago
          The case you linked isn't about the government filming people in public, though. Carpenter vs. US was a case about the government demanding private information about users' locations from cell service providers. By comparison, the 9th circuit concluded that the plain view doctrine means electronic license plate readers are legal :https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2020/05/04/1...

          An officer doesn't need a warrant to sit at a cross section and write down license plate numbers. A device doing the same thing is also legal.

          • hilariouslyan hour ago
            Of course that's a fair interpretation, I am saying there's some tension between mass surveillance and the fourth just because its "done in public" doesn't mean it automatically escapes scrutiny now or going forward.
            • Manuel_Dan hour ago
              No, the fact that it's recording people in public does make it escape scrutiny moving forward. In public you can be filmed by anyone - be they government or private citizens.

              I find a lot of people fail to realize this, both in regards to surveillance and otherwise. Recently in my city there was a big uproar about a nudist beach that was at risk of having nudity prohibited. So a bunch of nudists went out and paraded around the beach while disrobed, some of them bringing their children with them. People sailed by and photographed many of the nudists, and put their images online. Many alleged that must be a violation of some privacy law, but no, the law in Washington (and most, perhaps all, of the US) is quite clear: if you're in public, you can be filmed and photographed. If you don't want to be filmed nude, don't go walking around naked in public.

              Regardless, back to the topic at hand, the fact that Flock cameras a in public spaces does in fact mean that there's no requirement to get a warrant to use them.

              • jollyllamaan hour ago
                So what's the logical conclusion, that there will be a company with a drone following every individual in a public space at all times and that the government will pay for the data?
                • b40d-48b2-979e43 minutes ago
                  Considering how desperately that user is responding to every comment on this post, it seems they have a vested interest in playing blind for Flock, which makes me think they are paid by Flock.
                  • Manuel_D38 minutes ago
                    Lol, I should be getting paid.

                    But no, I just like to dispel the myths people have about their imaginary right to not be filmed in public. Whether it's by the government or by other private people.

                • Manuel_D44 minutes ago
                  The logical conclusion is that the US brings itself in line with the rest of the developed world, and realizes video cameras are useful for solving crime.

                  Flying drones are not required, stationary cameras are more than enough outside of specific scenarios like active pursuit.

              • caconym_30 minutes ago
                > No, the fact that it's recording people in public does make it escape scrutiny moving forward. In public you can be filmed by anyone - be they government or private citizens.

                This is false. While there is no strongly established precedent yet, there are certainly serious and plausible legal arguments being made that unlimited collection and collation/cross-referencing/etc. of "public" information can under certain circumstances constitute a search. It will most certainly not "escape scrutiny moving forward".

                e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic_theory_of_the_Fourth_Am...

                • Manuel_D26 minutes ago
                  The legality of automated license plate readers has gone all the way up to the United States Court of Appeals. That's the second highest court in the country, superseded only by the Supreme Court.

                  This is as strong as precedent gets, short of a SCOTUS decision.

                  • caconym_9 minutes ago
                    That doesn't sound like escaping scrutiny to me! Sounds like it's getting pretty thoroughly scrutinized, in fact.

                    > This is as stromg (sic) as precedent gets, short of a SCOTUS decision.

                    Another egregious misrepresentation. The courts are obviously making their rulings as narrow as possible because they know the "mosaic theory" style arguments have some merit. Look at US vs. Yang, for example, in which the court dodged the issue completely with some argument about rental car contract periods. And Schmidt v. Norfolk, which IIUC directly challenges Flock ALPRs on 4A grounds, is pending.

                    Lots and lots of scrutiny. Your claim that the conclusion is foregone here is obviously absurd. Even when/if it gets to SCOTUS I expect they'll write as narrow an opinion as they can get away with, in whatever direction it falls.

      • reactordevan hour ago
        All flock cameras are privately owned, by flock. They install them at a charge per the jurisdiction that orders them and pays the subscription costs… those subscription fees allow Mr Local Law Abuser to lookup any license plate it has read, when, where, with a picture of the vehicle.

        https://deflock.org

        You’d be surprised how many there are.

      • devindotcoman hour ago
        it's not about filming in public. it's about systematic data collection by law enforcement, using private infrastructure present by its nature in public. that's why the Carpenter decision is relevant.
        • Manuel_D42 minutes ago
          The Carpenter decision was about the US government compelling mobile data providers to hand over private use information. It's really not relevant to flock. That's why the 9th Circuit decided that automated license plate readers don't need a warrant. A cop and stand at an intersection and write down license plate numbers without a warrant. A device can do the same.
      • mingus88an hour ago
        The year is 2026 and the 4th amendment only means what the currently sitting justices say that it means, and the executive branch was literally given a pass to violate any law on the books that they want.
        • Manuel_Dan hour ago
          The 9th circuit upheld that the police do not need warrants to operate and access data from license plate readers. The 9th Circuit isn't exactly a conservative stronghold.
          • mingus8837 minutes ago
            That’s really beside the point. It doesn’t matter what the 9th circuit or any other court says.

            Our country is no longer a country of laws. Laws are only as good as they are enforced. The SCOTUS, the DOJ, the FBI, and congress have openly abdicated any constitutional responsibility to provide checks and balances to reign in the abuses we see posted to HN every day.

      • qmran hour ago
        Wrong. See Carpenter v US.
        • Manuel_Dan hour ago
          That's not applicable to Flock, though. That case pertained to the government requesting that mobile service providers give historical location data on users.
  • throwaway85825an hour ago
    When flock data was FOIAd the state just exempted the data from FOIA.
  • connort45912 minutes ago
    The fact police can go in and just look at camera footage without warrant proves your point precisely, officers have used it to stalk family members, etc.
    • jimt12344 minutes ago
      This type of thing is definitely real. A friend of mine went on a date with an NYPD cop back in the 90s. She refused a second date, and the stalking began. It wasn't 'tech stalking', like today, but the cop started asking interrogating questions to her landlord and co-workers; she started getting weird/false parking tickets, etc. The only way she made it stop was that her cousin was a veteran with NYPD, and well, he had a little chat with the young, stalking cop. But who knows where it all would've ended up if her cousin wasn't also a cop???
  • qmran hour ago
    So glad we got them kicked out of Mountain View.
  • gigel8232 minutes ago
    Can I set up my own camera on the side of the road (in a public place) to scan people's faces and license plates, link them up to one of the many data brokers (or leaks) and use a big display to show the drivers' pictures and something like "Hey Rick Larsen, it's the 24th time we've seen you this week. We'll let our clients know there's no one home at 2930 Wetmore Avenue, Everett most weekdays between 8 and 4!", and then place them somewhere like oh, I don't know, in close proximity to a capitol building?

    We can pay the regular fees that advertisers pay to have billboards up.

    And if we're not allowed to do that, why is Flock?

    • Manuel_D9 minutes ago
      Yes, you are allowed to set up a camera, as long as you own the land you're putting the camera on or you have permission from the landowner.

      Again, I'm surprised by how many people don't realize that it's legal to film people in public.

    • etchalon4 minutes ago
      You can probably do that, so long as you're doing it on property you own.
  • npuntan hour ago
    > Important subject

    > Uses slop AI art

    Fastest way to make something into a farce.

    • pixel_popping24 minutes ago
      It's genuinely triggering rage to see this on a "serious" article.
  • richwateran hour ago
    acab
  • cdrnsfan hour ago
    Regular reminder that their CEO called Deflock a terrorist organization. I hope they go out of business and their cameras end up as e-waste.
  • josefritzishere2 hours ago
    As far as I can tell from the news, Flock is only used to commit crimes.
  • testertester00an hour ago
    [dead]
  • darig2 hours ago
    [dead]