Cleveland activists urged city leaders Wednesday to end the city’s contract with Flock Safety and remove automated license plate readers from public streets, while residents in Chandler and Troy attended city meetings this week to oppose or seek stricter limits on Flock ALPR camera deployments and to demand transparent data access and retention policies. Cleveland officials are weighing a one-year extension to the Flock contract this week, and city council safety committees across municipalities are scheduling further reviews; Chandler police report 40 active cameras and a proposed $153,000 contract renewal on Thursday. Organizers including East Valley Unite’s Nathan Taylortaft and Flock No have called for removal, while Troy leaders announced a 60-day data review.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
Flock Safety 的 ALPR 摄像机正在克利夫兰、钱德勒和特洛伊等城市出现。这些摄像机可以读取车牌,可能会影响您的隐私。如果您对此感到担忧,请查看您所在城市与 Flock Safety 的合同,并在市议会会议上发表您的意见。
社区正在抵制 Flock Safety 的 ALPR 摄像头,要求提高透明度和设置限制。辩论的焦点在于隐私与安全。请关注您所在城市立场的相关更新。如果您认识重视隐私的人,值得转发。
执法机构和 Flock Safety(其投资者包括 Andreessen Horowitz)通过调查数据访问和合同收入机会,从 ALPR 部署中受益。
当地居民,特别是移民和西班牙裔社区,以及隐私倡导者,在多次市政会议上就监控、数据收集、保留政策和所谓的针对性调查表示了日益增长的担忧。
No left-leaning sources found for this story.
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