The Iowa House has passed a bill to regulate law enforcement’s use of systems that capture and store images of license plates.
Flock Safety, which sells cameras, drones and AI software to police departments, was valued at $8.4 billion in a new round of funding completed in recent weeks, a modest bump from its financing last ...
The Louisville Metro Council’s Public Safety Committee on Wednesday voted against a proposal that would force the city to ...
More than 300 license plate reader cameras are in the Des Moines metro. Despite privacy concerns, police say the cameras are ...
The Dane County Board of Supervisors voted Thursday to end funding for a controversial automatic license plate reader system, ...
A lawsuit challenges San Jose’s network of license plate readers, arguing warrantless tracking of drivers violates the Fourth ...
About 80 Oshkosh residents turned out April 15 to address renewing the city’s Flock camera contract, raising privacy and data ...
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The Mexican security company with a $1.27 billion surveillance empire
Founded as a home alarm business in 1995, Grupo Seguritech now operates 188 command centers across Mexico and has at least 31 ...
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Penn State piloting license plate readers: What to know about ALPR cameras on campus
Penn State is piloting a network of automated license plate reader cameras around its University Park campus, part of a ...
The suit seeks a requirement that police delete camera data within 24 hours unless they secure a specific warrant.
Police across Michigan are expanding license plate reader technology even as residents and lawmakers question how the data is collected, stored and shared.
Statewide, more than 180 law enforcement agencies ― nearly a third of all agencies in Michigan ― now use Flock Safety ...
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