this post was submitted on 04 Feb 2024
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privacy
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Totally fine for California to have all that data though...
I don't think the sharing part is really the issue here.
Yeah, fuck that. The day I learn my car is being tracked is the day I start covering my license plate.
You're going to need a time machine then.
Lol credit agencies have been selling this service for years to Repomen and PIs amongst other groups who buy and sell this data regularly. One commercially available option from TransUnion: https://www.tlo.com/vehicle-sightings
I'll make sure to reach 88mph while the fuzz is chasing me.
Its today
I don't live in an area with street cameras or even regular police patrols. There's obviously record of me owning the car but I'd be surprised if there's any footage anywhere of me driving it other than the private CCTV of different local fuel stations and I never go to the one closest to my house since I've been told the fuel there is of lower quality.
They're both issues.
https://sls.eff.org/technologies/automated-license-plate-readers-alprs
The government does not own the database, nor is this a California wide thing. This is local police departments being permitted to use private companies to maintain databases of citizen activity, and those private companies have developed a robust system to share that information.
Remembering of course that these cameras are mounted on public infrastructure. People are paying taxes, and that tax money is being used to buy, mount, and maintain these camera systems, but the actual data is not in a database the government of California (and by extension the citizens of California) has direct control over.
It would actually be better if the state of California had its own database because it would be more scrutinized than these random private databases that cops are allowed to put together and host on some private companies server.