SDT-U: Could San Diego Police Department’s smart streetlights program infringe upon privacy rights? [as in 500 pole cameras]

The San Diego Times-Union: Could San Diego Police Department’s smart streetlights program infringe upon privacy rights? By Lyndsay Winkley (“Experts say it’s hard to identify when surveillance technology encroaches on a person’s Fourth Amendment rights, but pervasiveness definitely plays a role.”):

How many cameras or spy planes or days of cellphone location data does it take to violate the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures?

And where does the San Diego Police Department’s proposal to install 500 streetlight cameras sit in the the broader matrix of surveillance and constitutional rights?

It’s a question several Privacy Advisory Board members asked themselves last month while reviewing the department’s proposal. And it’s a question the San Diego City Council will need to contend with Tuesday when its members decide whether the cameras should be funded and installed.

It finds a parallel in the Baltimore constant aerial surveillance case. As a pole camera alone, no, but 500? Maybe.

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