In the video, Milliman warned Elser, “You know we have cameras in that jurisdiction and you can’t get a breath of fresh air, in or out of that place, without us knowing, correct?”
After Elser adamantly denied taking the package, Milliman then claimed that the theft victim provided footage that supposedly showed Elser in the act. However, he refused to show Elser that footage because she would not admit her guilt.
“If you’re going to deny it, I’m not going to give you any courtesy,” Milliman said. “If you’re going to lie to me, I’m not going to give you any courtesy.”
Not that I disagree with the sentiment, but this isn't the case in the subject of the story. Financial Planner and Rivian driver doesn't smack of the "poorest of communities."Notice it always hits the poorest of communities? Seems to keep piling up on the ones already drowning
Yes, the url isn't correct. It's currently linking to "https://livefreeaz.come/" instead of "https://livefreeaz.com/"The link to the template of how to fight Flock in your community isn't working.
This isn't really true, and it's a window to actually build coalitions with people with political power. Where I live, it's the richest suburbs that have Flock - they are terrified of crime from the city. But they are voluntarily submitting to mass surveillance to protect themselves from a waning crime panic. We can build coalitions if we don't always immediately divide everyone up.Notice it always hits the poorest of communities? Seems to keep piling up on the ones already drowning
That is what I am discovering also. The "deflock.me" website I linked to above shows several of their cameras posted in my area in what looked like privately-owned venues-- shopping centers, Lowe's, etc. It's not great.Something to keep in mind is this article only helps fight "public" Flock contracts purchased through cities or counties. Home Depot, at least in my area in Oregon, has Flock cameras posted at the entrance of every driveway of the properties they have stores at. Same thing with a locally owned community credit union.
What can we do to effectively push private companies to stop contracts with Flock? Just abstaining from shopping there won't be good enough.
What can we do to effectively push private companies to stop contracts with Flock? Just abstaining from shopping there won't be good enough.
Home Depot's answer to this was, well, you can opt-out by not shopping here. The parking lots of all the home depots near me have a Flock camera pointing to you entering and you leaving the lot. And don't forget the cameras at the self-checkout, along with any 'guilt cams' in the tools section that DING DONG as you walk in the aisle and your face has a green frame about the display.Something to keep in mind is this article only helps fight "public" Flock contracts purchased through cities or counties. Home Depot, at least in my area in Oregon, has Flock cameras posted at the entrance of every driveway of the properties they have stores at. Same thing with a locally owned community credit union.
What can we do to effectively push private companies to stop contracts with Flock? Just abstaining from shopping there won't be good enough.
What an amazingly generous comment about the trustworthiness of cops.A financial planner in her 40s living in a Denver neighborhood, Chrisanna Elser, learned the hard way that cops can’t always be trusted to vet Flock data.
EFF is encouraged that lawmakers are pushing the FTC to probe Flock’s data handling, even if no investigation follows, Hamid said. “This represents a significant shift—federal policymakers are now directly confronting the fact that Flock’s infrastructure poses genuine risks to people’s privacy and safety,” she suggested.
I wonder what her opinion would be if/when Trump comes out in support of Flock? I'd love to see the confliction happen.A conservative who voted for Donald Trump, Boyce became determined to take the cameras down. She soon realized that many people in her community who opposed Flock were liberal, people she “normally wouldn’t be having conversations with.” But it was worth being “open to having conversations with them,” she said, if it meant ending Flock’s invasive tracking.
I like "flock off", but there are all manner of possibilities. Flock, Ring - any of these systems that pass data automatically to entit[ies] outside a home/property owner are problematic. Even those that do not, I don't believe contribute much to actual safety.If their campaigns are not called "Get the Flock out of here" someone failed marketing class.
What I'd like to see is her or someone like her take it to the mat. Demand a public apology or take it to trial. Reality is most people don't the ability for a long fight and settle for a payout. And that's what police depts bank on so they can sweep it under the rug. Meanwhile, the taxpayer is on the hook for their malfeasance.While I’m not an ACAB person, JFC, some of them make it really hard not to be. Thankfully this person is fighting fire with fire and has her video of the interaction with the cop. I hope she sues and gets $$$
Ben Jordan has an excellent and disturbing video about Flock. He even presented to congress about it recently.
View: https://youtu.be/Pp9MwZkHiMQ
Or paint. They are solar powered…You can find a pretty effective solution for that in the saw aisle
ftfyA financial planner in her 40s living in a Denver neighborhood, Chrisanna Elser, learned the hard way that cops can’talwaysbe trustedto vet Flock data.
I stopped shopping at Home Depot years ago because of those cameras in the store. I also use Lowes only as a last resort due to the Flock camera they've had right in front of their entrance for years.Home Depot's answer to this was, well, you can opt-out by not shopping here. The parking lots of all the home depots near me have a Flock camera pointing to you entering and you leaving the lot. And don't forget the cameras at the self-checkout, along with any 'guilt cams' in the tools section that DING DONG as you walk in the aisle and your face has a green frame about the display.
Isn't the CEO of HD a major Trump supporter? Seems HD needs to lose business....
That's why I have been boycotting HD since 2016.Isn't the CEO of HD a major Trump supporter? Seems HD needs to lose business....
Even if I thought your argument had merit, and to be honest I don't, I'm not turning over my privacy to try and make some people who are scared of their own shadows feel better.I'm likely to be downvoted to heck for this, but I think this is more complicated than folks want to make out. The privacy violations are a problem, the lack of oversight is a huge problem, and the sloppy police work is a disaster. Those constitute huge arguments against use of the cameras.
But we also live in a time when people "feel" that crime is out of control. (Even in places where the numbers say otherwise.) That feeling is not abstract -- it's led them to vote for terrible "tough on crime" politicians, right up to the chief lawbreaker himself. And while the failure modes of ALPRs are awful, it's hard to avoid the near-weekly "successes" reported on local news and local "police blotter" type newspapers and newsletters. I literally read them every week: Cops arrest wanted drug dealer after hit on license plate camera... Notorious west-side shoplifter arrested after brief chase when camera spots license plate...
Are they frequently catching the FBI's Top-10 most wanted, or solving murder cases? No, probably not. But the little stuff matters to a lot of people, and those people vote.
Being or knowing the victim of a false or malicious arrest due to technology failures is certainly enough to make anyone go militantly anti-camera. But there are also undeniably a pretty large population of people out there who are comforted by them, and the knowledge that if the "bad guys" come into their neighborhood, the cops are gonna get them.
I'm 100% for additional legal barriers, backstops and standards of evidence for the camera data to be used. But a wholesale removal of a tool perceived to be keeping communities safer may backfire in ways people are even less happy with. Perception may be reality here.
tl;dr: These cameras suck and almost never work the way they're supposed to, but a lot of people seem to like them. Let's keep doing the stupid thing!I'm likely to be downvoted to heck for this, but I think this is more complicated than folks want to make out. The privacy violations are a problem, the lack of oversight is a huge problem, and the sloppy police work is a disaster. Those constitute huge arguments against use of the cameras.
But we also live in a time when people "feel" that crime is out of control. (Even in places where the numbers say otherwise.) That feeling is not abstract -- it's led them to vote for terrible "tough on crime" politicians, right up to the chief lawbreaker himself. And while the failure modes of ALPRs are awful, it's hard to avoid the near-weekly "successes" reported on local news and local "police blotter" type newspapers and newsletters. I literally read them every week: Cops arrest wanted drug dealer after hit on license plate camera... Notorious west-side shoplifter arrested after brief chase when camera spots license plate...
Are they frequently catching the FBI's Top-10 most wanted, or solving murder cases? No, probably not. But the little stuff matters to a lot of people, and those people vote.
Being or knowing the victim of a false or malicious arrest due to technology failures is certainly enough to make anyone go militantly anti-camera. But there are also undeniably a pretty large population of people out there who are comforted by them, and the knowledge that if the "bad guys" come into their neighborhood, the cops are gonna get them.
I'm 100% for additional legal barriers, backstops and standards of evidence for the camera data to be used. But a wholesale removal of a tool perceived to be keeping communities safer may backfire in ways people are even less happy with. Perception may be reality here.
This isn't really true, and it's a window to actually build coalitions with people with political power. Where I live, it's the richest suburbs that have Flock - they are terrified of crime from the city. But they are voluntarily submitting to mass surveillance to protect themselves from a waning crime panic. We can build coalitions if we don't always immediately divide everyone up.
Ben Jordan has an excellent and disturbing video about Flock. He even presented to congress about it recently.
View: https://youtu.be/Pp9MwZkHiMQ
That phrase brings back memories. A friend of mine, when it was time to get going, would always say "let's make like a shepherd". Meaning "let's get the flock out of here".If their campaigns are not called "Get the Flock out of here" someone failed marketing class.
Flock cameras mushroomed here (2024 in se Houston) during the Biden administration. I have no choice , every city in my area has cameras on every entry and exit to the city. My neighborhood HOA has them. I’m constantly survailed, probably with the new flock drones too. Plus my car is selling my information, my cell, my internet, the airport and TSA facial scanners. There is no privacy in an urban area. I understand I have nothing to hide b.s. argument, but the problem is I don’t trust the government and law enforcement to not abuse their power/position. Hell they’re probably putting me on a watch list because of this post.This. I'm pretty sure keeping track of when "those people" drive into their rich suburb is very much one the main drivers.
I'm likely to be downvoted to heck for this, but I think this is more complicated than folks want to make out. The privacy violations are a problem, the lack of oversight is a huge problem, and the sloppy police work is a disaster. Those constitute huge arguments against use of the cameras.
But we also live in a time when people "feel" that crime is out of control. (Even in places where the numbers say otherwise.) That feeling is not abstract -- it's led them to vote for terrible "tough on crime" politicians, right up to the chief lawbreaker himself. And while the failure modes of ALPRs are awful, it's hard to avoid the near-weekly "successes" reported on local news and local "police blotter" type newspapers and newsletters. I literally read them every week: Cops arrest wanted drug dealer after hit on license plate camera... Notorious west-side shoplifter arrested after brief chase when camera spots license plate...
Are they frequently catching the FBI's Top-10 most wanted, or solving murder cases? No, probably not. But the little stuff matters to a lot of people, and those people vote.
Being or knowing the victim of a false or malicious arrest due to technology failures is certainly enough to make anyone go militantly anti-camera. But there are also undeniably a pretty large population of people out there who are comforted by them, and the knowledge that if the "bad guys" come into their neighborhood, the cops are gonna get them.
I'm 100% for additional legal barriers, backstops and standards of evidence for the camera data to be used. But a wholesale removal of a tool perceived to be keeping communities safer may backfire in ways people are even less happy with. Perception may be reality here.
The privacy violations are a problem, the lack of oversight is a huge problem, and the sloppy police work is a disaster. [...] And while the failure modes of ALPRs are awful, it's hard to avoid the near-weekly "successes" reported on local news and local "police blotter" type newspapers and newsletters. I literally read them every week: Cops arrest wanted drug dealer after hit on license plate camera... Notorious west-side shoplifter arrested after brief chase when camera spots license plate...
I upvoted you to try to cancel out a knee-jerk down vote because I think you're arguing in good faith, but I don't agree with what you're saying.But we also live in a time when people "feel" that crime is out of control. (Even in places where the numbers say otherwise.) That feeling is not abstract -- it's led them to vote for terrible "tough on crime" politicians, right up to the chief lawbreaker himself. And while the failure modes of ALPRs are awful, it's hard to avoid the near-weekly "successes" reported on local news and local "police blotter" type newspapers and newsletters. I literally read them every week: Cops arrest wanted drug dealer after hit on license plate camera... Notorious west-side shoplifter arrested after brief chase when camera spots license plate...
I'm 100% for additional legal barriers, backstops and standards of evidence for the camera data to be used. But a wholesale removal of a tool perceived to be keeping communities safer may backfire in ways people are even less happy with. Perception may be reality here.