Malwarebytes: What the Flock is happening with license plate readers?

Malwarebytes: What the Flock is happening with license plate readers? by Matt Burgess:

You’re driving home after another marathon day of work and kid-shuttling, nursing a lukewarm coffee in a mug that’s trying too hard. As you turn onto your street, something new catches your eye. It’s a tall pole with a small, boxy device perched on top. But it’s not a bird-house and there’s no sign. There is, however, a camera pointed straight at your car.

It feels reassuring at first. After all, a neighbor was burglarized a few weeks ago. But then, dropping your kids at school the next morning, you pass another, and you start to wonder: Is my daily life being recorded and who is watching it?

That’s what happened to me. After a break-in on our street, a neighborhood camera caught an unfamiliar truck. It provided the clue police needed to track down the suspects. The same technology has shown up in major investigations, including the “Coroner Affair” murder case on ABC’s 20/20. These cameras aren’t just passive hardware. They’re everywhere now, as common as mailboxes, quietly logging where we go.

So if they’re everywhere, what do they collect? Who’s behind them? And what should the rest of us know before we get too comfortable or too uneasy?

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