The Ventura County Sheriff's Office said out-of-state agencies accessed their license plate reader data more than 364,000 times, including federal agencies.
San Jose is tightening controls over its automated license plate reader program, as the city faces mounting public pressure over surveillance concerns and a lawsuit.
Public outcry has continued more than a month after the City Council approved a new contract with Flock Safety.
Across San Jose, nearly 474 automated license plate reader cameras scan passing vehicles every day, capturing plate numbers, vehicle descriptions, and location.
The San José City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to tighten restrictions on its network of automated license plate reader cameras — the latest Bay Area municipality to take a closer look at the ...
Surveillance backlash grows as residents dismantle Flock ALPR cameras across multiple states ...
The company behind a network of automated license plate reading cameras is losing its public safety contracts across Silicon ...
The Milwaukee Police Department has cut off access to its automated license plate reader database for a majority of its officers, according to a department spokesperson.
A growing number of California cities and police departments have cut ties with Flock after reports that that its data was ...
The sheriff’s office says it is barred from using the cameras under a new policy adopted by the Board of Supervisors.
While motley in style, commenters were unanimous in substance: Flock cameras must be purged from Bloomington. A Flock camera ...
Flock Safety, the controversial Atlanta-based surveillance company, just wants to build a network of cameras that allows it to track every single person's movements at all times, and for some reason, ...