Sign Up | Log In
REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
How License-Plate Scanners Are Eroding Our Privacy
Friday, November 22, 2013 10:03 PM
GEEZER
Keep the Shiny side up
Quote:Here's a thought experiment: imagine that activists, concerned with official misconduct, install license-plate readers on private property to track the location of every car belonging to the police department or a politician and upload the locations to a public database. The result: a map of where the police go, and where they don't—along, perhaps, with politicians' visits to motels or strip clubs. Given that police often respond with hostility to simply being videotaped, I expect that a venture like this would prompt an outcry, and probably some efforts to shut it down. But this is precisely what officialdom is doing to citizens. We now know that federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies are using automated license-plate scanners, mounted on everything from telephone poles to police cars, to build a huge database of where people are driving. This might seem like a small intrusion compared with the electronic spying carried out by the NSA. But not all threats to privacy involve the tracking of emails and other communications. Right now, the law suggests that license-plate scanners don't invade your privacy because they record only events that occur in public. After all, anyone could see you driving down the road or parked in front of a motel. But if officials add up enough bits of information like that, they gradually can construct what the ACLU has termed a "single, high-resolution image of our lives." There's a legal term for this idea: the mosaic theory. The New York Times ran a story last year about how a man angrily confronted a Target store manager to complain that the company was sending his teenage daughter coupons for baby goods. Were they trying to encourage her to get pregnant? Nope. Target's data-mining operation had found a strong correlation between purchases of about 25 items—scent-free lotions, certain nutritional supplements, and so on—and different stages of pregnancy. The teenager's purchases had fit the pattern. The father apologized to Target a few days later, when it turned out that his daughter was, in fact, pregnant. Law enforcement agencies may not know or care what toiletries you buy, but they can access credit reports and property tax records, which are public information. Setting that aside, simply tracking our movements can erode our privacy. The Supreme Court recently held that police need a search warrant to attach a GPS tracker to an individual's car, even though the device would just be recording travel along public roads. The decision turned largely on the idea that placing a locating device on your car is a trespass on your property. But five justices also suggested some sympathy to the mosaic theory as a legal argument; whether the court actually adopts such an approach will have to wait for a later case. The Supreme Court, though, isn't the first step in protecting privacy; it's the last. If people are unhappy with the notion of having their movements, email, Web searches, and other behavior tracked, there's nothing to stop Congress, or state legislatures, from limiting this sort of activity, both on the part of private businesses and, more significantly, on the part of law enforcement. When it comes to protecting your rights and privacy, there's no reason to wait for courts to act. And while we're at it, maybe we should enable the public to return the surveillance favor. In his prophetic 1998 book, The Transparent Society, David Brin wrote that technology was going to make it almost impossible to stop snooping. But, he suggested, if the government and corporations want to spy on us, they should let the public know what they are doing, too, by letting us track their data. We can set up Web feeds from every police headquarters, for a start. Today, we're living in Brin's world, or at least we're halfway there. Big organizations are already watching individuals—perhaps it's time to open things up in the other direction.
Saturday, November 23, 2013 8:21 AM
Quote:More eyes on the street: D.C. adds 130 enforcement cameras WASHINGTON -- Look who's watching. The Metropolitan Police Department has new eyes on streets: More than 130 new traffic cameras have been set up in the District and they go live on Saturday. There is a grace period for the first month, when drivers will get warnings. But that introductory period ends Dec. 30, at which time fines will go out. D.C. Police defend their deployment by pointing to safety records. "We've experienced reductions in traffic fatalities over the last ten years of about 70 percent," says Lamar Greene, an assistant police chief, of the effectiveness of traffic enforcement cameras. The new photo enforcement technology, part of a campaign called D.C. Street Safe, targets a variety of traffic violations. The devices will uniquely capture infractions like "blocking the box" at intersections, speeding, driving through crosswalks and having oversized and overweight vehicles in neighborhoods. "There is a three-tiered check that we do before any (ticket) is issued," Greene says, trying to reassure drivers who fear they could be unfairly ticketed. "There are human eyes that look at any (citation) -- look at the infraction, look at the pictures, look at the footage before (fines) are issued to any citizen," he says. Where these devices will be deployed was determined by past accidents, service calls, school zones and frequent speeding. Fines reach $250 for several violations. Driving 26 mph or more above the speed limit results in a $300 fine.
Saturday, November 23, 2013 9:09 AM
FREMDFIRMA
Quote:Alex Saleh, the store’s owner for 17 years, has been watching his customers, mostly poor and black, being harassed by Miami Gardens police for more than a year. Saleh decided to install 15 video cameras, not to protect the store from criminals, but to protect his customers from Miami Gardens police.
Saturday, November 23, 2013 4:06 PM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Saturday, November 23, 2013 11:16 PM
1KIKI
Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.
Monday, November 25, 2013 7:29 AM
Quote:Drivers' videos show Morningside speed-camera problems MORNINGSIDE, Md. - A WTOP Ticketbuster investigation has uncovered serious questions about the accuracy of a speed camera on Suitland Road in Morningside, Md. The revelation comes from two videos shot by drivers inside their cars. Steven Johnson, of Upper Marlboro, and Mike Weathersby, of Morningside, shared the videos exclusively with WTOP. Both had been suspicious about the cameras and wanted to record evidence. Weathersby shot his video on Aug. 14 while driving past the 6800 Suitland Road South camera at 7:18 p.m. "You see the camera in the video, you'll see my clock on the dashboard, you'll see my speedometer and you'll plainly see it's at 30 miles per hour. You'll also hear WTOP on in the background. And I got the ticket that said 44 miles per hour," says Weathersby. "But the video shows me going 30 miles per hour. How can you dispute it? It's video. It isn't edited; it just shows me going past the camera and it shows my speed on the speedometer." WTOP authenticated the Weathersby video in two ways: First, the WTOP commercials in the background correspond to the date and time listed on the Morningside citation. Second, a time-stamp in the video file properties, which cannot be altered or changed, matches the citation. "Let me be clear: I don't have a problem with speed cameras," Weathersby says. "I don't need to drive fast. As long as it's working properly, they're OK; they're slowing people down. But when you get a ticket saying you're speeding and you have proof that you are not, then I have a problem with it. Something is rotten with this camera." Steven Johnson recorded his video on May 17 while driving past the same camera. His video also shows him driving 30 mph at 8:17 a.m. in his BMW 545i. Johnson received a ticket in the mail the next week. Morningside police alleged Johnson was traveling at 45 mph, in contrast to his video. When he realized he had a video, he says he called it an "aha moment." "There's no way that any competent and reasonable judge would allow this citation to carry any weight in a court of law. I've got excellent proof that the calibration on these cameras is false," says Johnson. "This video that I have taken is far more representative of my actual speed and the cameras on the street were very inaccurate. I decided to fight that in a court of law." Johnson's ticket was dismissed in court in July, where he met with and coached Weathersby to shoot his own video. Johnson says there were a couple other videos that corresponded to Morningside tickets and those too were thrown out in court. "I think any reasonable person would come to the same conclusion [looking at these videos] that the accuracy of the cameras is off. I think there's a strong possibility that personal videos taken by motorists will be upheld in court," says Johnson. AAA Mid-Atlantic's John Townsend watched the videos and examined the tickets with WTOP Radio in our investigation and says he's horrified at what he's seen. "This stinks to high heaven," Townsend says. "They have been confronted with the evidence that their system is illegally issuing tickets and they should cease and desist. If this system is so flawed and you don't do anything of that, then that bespeaks of corruption." "I love the speed cameras and the great opportunities their revenue provide to do things for the community," Morningside Town Councilwoman Regina Foster said in April 2012 of the cameras, according to the Gazette. Foster resigned from her seat in 2011 after a Maryland State Police investigation found she inappropriately voided red-light camera tickets for herself and others before getting re-elected in 2012. She denied the charges. Todd Pounds, Morningside's town attorney, declined to be interviewed for this story, although he did speak to WTOP on the phone and email. He tells WTOP that the cameras are accurate and comply with Maryland law, but wouldn't comment on the videos themselves. WTOP asked Pounds to produce annual calibration and daily self- test records for the Suitland Road camera to substantiate his claims, but he refused to do so. Morningside is an incorporated town within Prince George's County with about 2,000 residents and covering only about a half a square mile. This summer, Ron Ely, of the Maryland Drivers Alliance, filed a public records request for the same documents, but Morningside denied his request. Ely has sued the town and Pounds to turn over the records. Where do we go from here? Townsend says Morningside needs to step up and run an open and transparent test of the speed camera. "It behooves Morningside to run a calibrated car to see if the system works," he says. "The fact that they won't do that tells me that they're satisfied with the status quo because it brings big bucks for the town." Montgomery County, Prince George's County and cities such as Laurel, Hagerstown and others run calibrated police cruisers passed their speed cameras to test their accuracy. Laurel, Hagerstown and Morningside all use Maryland-based speed camera vendor Brekford Corporation. Townsend and Ely both suggest to WTOP that any driver with a question should challenge a ticket in court. "I would also suggest drivers find an alternate route and avoid Morningside. That's the way you do it. Avoid the municipal town and find another way to work," Townsend says. Johnson and Weathersby suggest any drivers going past the speed camera on Suitland Road videotape themselves with the speedometer and some timestamp like WTOP Radio in the background. Should you get a ticket, the video could help you in court. Calibrated speedometer Some experts told WTOP that the knock against these videos as evidence was that these drivers didn't calibrate their speedometers. But can a speedometer that isn't calibrated display 30 mph when you're really traveling at 45 mph? One expert from East-West Lincoln in New Carrollton says it's virtually impossible. "Speedometers these days are all electronic. The anti-lock braking systems talk to the speedometer and if the two disagree, then a warning light would likely pop up," says the expert, who asked that we not use his name. "Unless you physically altered the vehicle in several ways, or you were an electronics expert and could tap into the readings, it's virtually impossible for a speedometer to be that far off." The expert tells WTOP that at worst the speedometer could be off about 5 to 10 percent, although that's less likely as cars become computerized. Red Tape in Morningside Unlike Steven Johnson, whose ticket was dismissed, Mike Weathersby ran into red tape when trying to fight his Aug. 14 citation. He was in District Court in Hyattsville on Sept. 11 on another speed-camera ticket and used the Aug. 14 video to convince the judge to toss the ticket. However, the judge refused to take up the August ticket and told Weathersby to file for another court date. Morningside received his request on Sept. 19, one day before the official payment due date, but told Weathersby he had forfeited his right to a hearing. "The citation issued included instruction that a request for a court date must be received 5 days prior to the payment due date. We allow for the postmarked due date when considering if a request has been made within the allowed time. Your request was not received within this time period," the letter says. Morningside was invoking a guideline the District Court of Maryland put on the back of all speed-camera citations, but one that multiple speed-camera officials in the state were unaware of and do not enforce. After WTOP asked about the legal basis for the decision, Pounds told WTOP that the town would not object to a hearing. On Saturday, WTOP learned that Brekford scheduled a court date for Weathersby, allowing him to present his video before a judge.
Monday, November 25, 2013 8:37 PM
YOUR OPTIONS
NEW POSTS TODAY
OTHER TOPICS
FFF.NET SOCIAL