State lawmaker Pam Hunter pushing to regulate license plate reader surveillance - Central Current
State lawmaker Pam Hunter pushing to regulate license plate reader surveillance Central Current
Read saved summary →Follow New York reporting, explore reported camera locations, request public records, track local decisions and add your name to the state petition for accountable automated license plate reader policy.
Ask for contracts, invoices, policies, retention settings, access lists, audit logs and usage reports.
Search state, county and city agendas for ALPR, license plate reader, surveillance technology and Flock-related items.
Advocate for public notice, purpose limits, short retention, audit trails and recurring transparency reports.
We ask state and local leaders to require public notice, meaningful debate, written use limits, auditable access, enforceable retention limits, documented sharing rules and regular public reporting for automated license plate reader systems.
verified signatures from supporters of this New York petition
State lawmaker Pam Hunter pushing to regulate license plate reader surveillance Central Current
Read saved summary →The Troubling Personal Side of Public Surveillance The Marshall Project
Read saved summary →Get The Flock Out American Civil Liberties Union
Read saved summary →Westchester County Police are Using License Plate Readers to Track Millions of Drivers NYCLU
Read saved summary →Westchester County built a 600-camera plate reader network that shared 1.6 billion scans with ICE, lawsuit says Fortune
Read saved summary →‘Indiscriminate surveillance’ lawsuit claims 1.6 billion car scans tracking millions of drivers The Independent
Read saved summary →Mapping Every Flock License Plate Reader Near US World Cup Stadiums WIRED
Read saved summary →Automated Surveillance Economics and Constitutional Friction The Westchester ALPR Precedent Lavender Hotel
Read saved summary →Civil Rights Groups Sue Westchester County Over License Plate Reader Surveillance System SSBCrack
Read saved summary →Crowdsourced OpenStreetMap-derived data supplied through DeFlock. Locations may be incomplete, outdated or inaccurate. Do not trespass, obstruct or interfere with equipment.