Stop Flock

(stopflock.com)

248 points | by cdrnsf 4 hours ago

11 comments

  • bmitch3020 47 minutes ago
    I don't want to stop Flock the company. I want to stop Flock the business model, along with all the other mass surveillance, and the data brokers. If the business models can't be made illegal, it should at least come with liabilities so high that no sane business would want to hold data that is essentially toxic waste.

    Without that, we are quickly spiraling into the dystopia where privacy is gone, and when the wrong person gets access to the data, entire populations are threatened.

    • stevemk14ebr 32 minutes ago
      You want to stop the source, which is that the government and other agencies can purchase surveillance data that would otherwise be disallowed by the 4th amendment. We need to end this 'laundering' of information through third parties, and enforce the constitution by its intent.
      • RHSeeger 13 minutes ago
        Not just the government. It shouldn't be possible for any random stalker to find someone's daily movements.
      • caconym_ 18 minutes ago
        Honestly it should probably just be illegal for anyone, private or public, to engage in mass surveillance (or "data gathering", whatever) of anybody who didn't expressly consent to it. As long as the data exist, they will be abused.
      • therobots927 16 minutes ago
        Means of Control by Byron Tau and Surveillance Valley by Yasha Levine. Can’t recommend these books enough for anyone who is skeptical of the above claim.
    • King-Aaron 10 minutes ago
      > I don't want to stop Flock the company. I want to stop Flock the business model, along with all the other mass surveillance, and the data brokers.

      Then you want to stop the company.

      Which is reasonable.

      • ceejayoz 5 minutes ago
        Flock isn’t the only company.
    • heyethan 2 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • jimmar 55 minutes ago
    I followed the shooting at Brown University last year very closely. Brown's leadership was heavily criticized for having camera blind spots and not being able to track the shooter's exact movements through campus. I can understand why people with stewardship over the safety of their students/customers/constituents would make decisions to err on the side of tracking. I'm not saying I agree with it, but I understand it.
    • kyrra 42 minutes ago
      The criticism around that event, I believe, involved Brown University disablinf cameras trying to protect potential illegal immigrants being targeted by ice. It wasn't the lack of cameras. It was a purposeful disabling of said cameras that already existed.
    • sodality2 32 minutes ago
      This is a very common pattern; my university pushed through a ZeroEyes AI camera/open carry weapon detection contract within 2 weeks of a shooting at a nearby school, even though it’s trivial to bypass by hiding it; it’s most probably just (gruesome as it is to think about) a bad press insurance so if anything happened, they can say they had “state of the art AI detection” and they did all they could. No one wants to be the one caught not doing “all they could” against the media cacophony in the immediate aftermath.
    • mcmcmc 45 minutes ago
      Camera blind spots are solved with more cameras and correct positioning, not automated AI surveillance.
    • sfblah 50 minutes ago
      With most of these things, people are against state power until they are victimized. It’s a common pattern.
  • jedberg 14 minutes ago
    We need a law that says if you hold any data about a person, they must be notified when anyone accesses it, including law enforcement.

    I used to work in criminal investigations. I understand how this might make investigation of real crime more difficult. But so does the fact that you need a warrant to enter someone's home, and yet we manage to investigate crime anyway.

    Your data should be an extension of your home, even if it's held by another company. It should require a warrant and notification. You could even make the notification be 24 hours after the fact. But it should be required.

    • tptacek 2 minutes ago
      The entities holding the information here are literally police departments. The information itself is evidence, used in active criminal investigations. It's good to want things, though.
  • himata4113 1 hour ago
    This is just reiterating same points deflock does including mentioning deflock and images from deflock?

    Deflock: https://deflock.org/

    Also: https://haveibeenflocked.com/

    • Computer0 40 minutes ago
      Yes I think this site is not unique, I personally have at least 2 websites I have not shared anywhere with at least all of this information, that I am developing for my local community or just for myself. Its a subject worth discussing but I am also skeptical of the value of this link. I think maybe what is most worth considering is, "does this have value over deflock?" is it more accessible? Less overwhelming? I am not sure but I think that conversation would not be a great use of time in this particular space.
  • arcanemachiner 1 hour ago
    I would never advocate criminal behavior, but I don't understand how these these things aren't destroyed en masse by, like... everyone.
    • JoshTriplett 1 hour ago
      Many of them have been.
    • seattle_spring 1 hour ago
      Every time they're discussed, I think of that scene of Homer bashing a weather station in the 70s[1]

      [1] https://youtu.be/zexJJb9Lbas

    • renewiltord 56 minutes ago
      Yeah, I don’t advocate criminal behavior either but I don’t understand how these troublesome priests aren’t rid of by, like…everyone.
      • rexpop 16 minutes ago
        OP is not a king.
        • renewiltord 2 minutes ago
          I didn’t say anyone was a king. I was just talking about troublesome priests.
  • khuston 43 minutes ago
    I’m all for mass surveillance of roadways, but I want to see results. Every day I see and hear people breaking laws with their vehicles in ways that make life worse for others around them.
    • MegagramEnjoyer 12 minutes ago
      This is a dangerous attitude.

      We don't need mass surveillance for traffic control. It can be done by the police if they really wanted to do it. Truth is, they don't care enough about road safety. This is about surveillance of citizens for control. First step is just infrastructure setup - next step is using it to prosecute those who dare to challenge the rise of fascism.

      Be an advocate for your own rights to privacy. Don't simply accept it as normalcy.

    • mcmcmc 32 minutes ago
      Yep. Automate the whole thing and be done with traffic cops abusing their power to meet quotas or harass minorities. It would likely make car insurance cheaper too since people would drive more safely, and the cost of investigations and arbitration drops down with readily available video evidence.
  • diogenes_atx 38 minutes ago
    To the list of references provided by this post in the section "Further Reading," I would add the following book:

    Sarah Brayne (2020) Predict and Surveil: Data, Discretion, and the Future of Policing, Oxford University Press

    https://www.amazon.com/Predict-Surveil-Discretion-Future-Pol...

    An academic study about the use of surveillance technology at the Los Angeles Police Department, the book documents the LAPD's use of data brokerage firms (e.g., Palantir) that collect and aggregate information from public records and private sources, as well as automatic license plate readers like Flock, and Suspicious Activity Reports generated by police and civilians, which include reports of mundane activities such as using binoculars, drawing diagrams, or taking pictures or "video footage with no apparent aesthetic value." All this data ultimately gets parked in Fusion Center facilities, built in the aftermath of 9/11, where federal, state and local law enforcement agencies collaborate to collect, aggregate, analyze and share information. As the author observes, "The use of data in law enforcement is not new. For almost a century, police have been gathering data, e.g., records of citations, collisions, warrants, incarcerations, sex offender and gang registries, etc. What is new and important about the current age of big data is the role in public policing of private capitalist firms who provide database systems with huge volumes of information about people, not just those in the criminal justice system."

  • amazingamazing 45 minutes ago
    I’m curious if there were some consortium of all private businesses with their own surveillance cams deciding to aggregate their footage could it be stopped?
    • dopidopHN2 12 minutes ago
      Home depot and lowes have contract with Flock, as an example.

      In New Orleans, a private rogue network of surveillance camera has been erected in reaction to a too constraining live facial recognition ban.

      I think it would be much harder to stop.

    • __MatrixMan__ 23 minutes ago
      I worry about this. It's easy enough to go around putting bags over flock cameras, but it would be harder to justify targeting ones that just maybe are doing double duty.

      We need to find a way to make partnering with flock a liability.

  • chris_wot 42 minutes ago
    Michel Foucault's Panopticon is alive and well I see.
  • SonOfKyuss 31 minutes ago
    I could be convinced to support public cameras if access to the footage was tightly controlled and only used for solving serious crimes, but government officials and flock themselves have repeatedly shown that they can’t be trusted to use them in a responsible manner. It’s too powerful of a tool to put in the hands of untrustworthy individuals
  • scarmig 9 minutes ago
    Although I oppose the surveillance state, it's important to understand the motivations and incentives involved in the move toward Flock (and its eventual successors); until those are resolved, governments are going to be implementing Flock style programs with relatively tepid opposition.

    Police departments are seriously understaffed in many major cities, and officers are much less efficient than they used to be. This has led to the decline of the beat cop, who provided a kind of ambient authority that helped create, both a sense and reality, of public order. People really want the sense (even more than the reality!) of public order; without that, they will jump to faddish solutions that promise it, regardless of the data for or against it.

    The best counter to Flock is to provide alternatives to it, not just reject it while keeping the status quo going. We need a new, vitalized police culture, that shares mutual trust and engagement with the community.