It seems that American citizens no longer can expect any privacy unless they lock themselves in a small dark aluminum-covered room (which has been scoured for electronic bugs). Our information society has spawned the entire surveillance system which has been implemented supposedly for our safety. But these changes were made without any review of whether it was legal or moral.
Now there are police cars fitted with license scanners, and sensors mounted on bridges and over-passes on the roadways. The police can track exactly where a person is by simply keeping track of where their vehicle has traveled. I personally believe it is an additional invasion of our privacy beyond the invasion which is caused by our smart phones.
Yesterday the press was full of stories about how stores can track you based on your phones wi-fi setting. They say this information is used in order to target marketing information to customers who may have an interest in various items. As one who has separated himself from the commercial culture I must state that I have NEVER purchased a single item because I saw an advertisement for it.
What is the solution to prevent Big Brother from completely owning our information, and thus owning our lives? The solution to the wi-fi tracking is to either leave the phone at home, turn it off and take the batteries out, or just not using these phones. As a smart-phone user I have grown accustomed to some of the apps I use and this is why I think this is such a big problem.
As to the license plate scanners I guess someone will need a way of fooling these scanners (like they do with the stop-light cameras using a blue-tinted cover for the license). But I think that collecting this information is a violation of our Constitutional rights. Doesn't the Bill of Rights clearly say that the government cannot randomly search and seize from a person without a warrant? Why can these so-called law-enforcement organizations flaunt the law so brazenly?
http://dailycaller.com/2013/07/17/aclu-decries-the-use-of-license-plate-scanner-systems/The American Civil Liberties Union condemned police departments’ use of license plate scanners to track every movement of every vehicle in a report released Wednesday.
The report “found that not only are license plate scanners widely deployed, but few police departments place any substantial restrictions on how they can be used,” according to an ACLU press release.
Automatic license plate readers are scanners placed on road signs and bridges or in patrol cars that capture every license plate that passes them. The software then assigns time and location stamps the pictures and reads the license plate numbers to see if they match up with stolen vehicles and other crimes.
The issue, according to ACLU Staff Attorney Catherine Crump, is that “the spread of these scanners [are] creating what are, in effect, government location tracking systems recording the movements of many millions of innocent Americans in huge databases.”
According to the press release, ACLU affiliates filed 600 Freedom of Information Requests that asked federal, state and local agencies how they use the readers.
The results varied, but the press release notes that it was clear there are few restrictions on how these systems are used. “The approach in Pittsburg, CA, is typical: a police policy document there says that license plate readers can be used for ‘any routine patrol operation or criminal investigation,’ adding, ‘reasonable suspicion or probable cause is not required.’”
The license plate scanning systems do help police, but the majority of information they collect is on non-crime related vehicles. In Maryland, 47 out of one million plates are flagged as “potentially associated with a stolen car or a person wanted for a serious crime,” according to the press release.
There are no regulations on how long police can keep the license plate data. The Minnesota State Partol deletes records after 48 hours but Grapevine and Milpitas do not have deletion policy.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2013/07/16/202801282/police-may-know-exactly-where-you-were-last-tuesday