On Tuesday, the Mountain View City Council voted to end its contract with Flock Safety, a major vendor of the plate readers, ...
Earlier this month, Mountain View police revealed that an audit uncovered unauthorized access to one city camera by federal ...
Flock Safety is facing a class action lawsuit. Filed by an Oakland-based firm, it alleges the company's license plate reading ...
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.
SJPD is preserving the use of the city’s 474 Flock cameras — as other jurisdictions are dropping them — but is changing retention and access rules following wide public outcry that includes ...
According to an internal review, out-of-state agencies ran more than 364,000 queries on the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office ...
Even after Flock removed California law enforcement agencies from its National Lookup service last year, unauthorized access ...
EL CERRITO — An audit by police into how license plate readers in the city have been used and who has gained access to them has revealed that more than one federal agency tapped into the network to ...
An audit by police into how license plate readers in the city have been used and who has gained access to them has revealed that more than one federal agency tapped into the network to gain car owners ...
Mountain View, California voted to end their contract with Flock after residents protested the automated license plate readers.
Cities around the country are debating whether to keep their automatic license plate readers. Concerns about privacy and federal immigration agents accessing local data are driving these debates.