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State Laws Against Surveillance and License Plate Cams: What Works Best for Your Privacy

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Why This Matters

This article highlights the importance of effective privacy laws in protecting consumers from invasive surveillance technologies like license plate readers and AI-powered cameras. As surveillance capabilities rapidly advance, strong legislation is crucial to safeguard individual privacy and prevent misuse by law enforcement and private companies. Encouraging informed policy action can help shape a safer, more privacy-conscious tech environment for all.

Key Takeaways

In my coverage of controversial surveillance company Flock Safety and similar license-plate trackers, such as Motorola's VehicleManager, I mentioned that one of the most effective steps US readers could take to protect their home and vehicles was to encourage their representatives to pass the right privacy protection laws. That's even more important now that AI recognition capabilities can instantly recognize a car, a person's face and other identifying information.

That raises a large question: What are the best privacy protection laws? I wanted to provide more details for anyone wondering what to support or what their state is currently doing. One challenge is that every state is different, and there's no clear guide on what privacy laws work and which have flaws.

I spoke to senior policy counsel and lead for American Civil Liberties Union's surveillance work, Chad Marlow, to find the best examples. These laws are making the biggest difference in our privacy.

"Collective action, rather than individual action, is required," Marlow told me. "I would caution that while Flock is the most problematic ALPR company in America, there are many other ALPR companies, like Axon and Motorola, that present serious privacy risks, so switching from Flock to Axon/Motorola ALPRs at best may constitute minimal harm reduction, but it is far from a solution."

Which of today's laws are a better solution? This is a "throw everything against the wall and see what sticks" situation. Let's talk about what's sticking.

The best laws on the books for limiting new surveillance technology

The details matter when it comes to laws against surveillance. Lawrence Glass/Getty

Current privacy laws focus on two recent capabilities of local law enforcement: ALPRs or automatic license plate readers that can identify and track cars, and drone surveillance equipped with AI cameras. Security companies, such as Flock, are also starting to offer more traditional cameras that can provide live views and track people from the ground.

With AI features like Flock's "Freeform" technology that let police enter any type of search they like to see what cameras bring up, these are powerful tools, and new legislation is required to address them. Let's go over several categories of laws that make a difference.

Laws restricting the use of AI detection features

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