Visa and Mastercard can catch a fraudulent $1,200 charge in minutes. The federal government can take 10 years to notice fraud, if it ever does. That gap is exactly why fraud is rampant.
Police in Houston, Texas, are panicking and have started an immediate investigation as citizens continue to destroy Flock cameras across the city.
The police are struggling to make a single arrest because nobody in the city is assisting them with the investigation.
"Public distaste for the cameras is growing nationwide."
GM - Flock says they have a 7% error rate when reading plates, which means 1.4 BILLION "alerts" from their system aren't accurate every month.
No liability for Flock, just 1.4 billion chances police draw guns on another innocent person.
Auto manufacturers are now engineering cars in a way they if you break one small thing, a massive repair is needed
Example: This door handle on the inside of this new 2023 vehicle broke, you would think you just need a new door handle. Wrong
You now have to replace the entire door panel because they have manufactured it so that the door handle can not be removed
So now instead of paying a small amount of money for a new door handle, you have pay insane amounts of money for a whole door panel
This should be illegal. We need much stronger right to repair laws in America
Rowe: "The Pentagon needs 400,000 welders and electricians just for submarine contracts over the next seven or eight years. It's mind-boggling... and they're all competing for your kid."
🚨 Security researcher Ben Jordan reveals that Flock cameras are secretly creating a GPS tracker for every car in America, and it’s already live
This is extremely concerning
“Flock license plate readers take a timestamped photo of every vehicle that passes every camera. Police can search your historical travel information for 30 days. This creates a searchable database of everyone, not just the suspects of crime — It's like if you were to build a graph of that sheet and plot it to a map, now it's as if you've had a GPS on your car for an entire month”
“In order for that historical data to be of investigative value, you have to track every car”
Flocks own training videos say they aren’t just tracking license plates, they’re tracking people
“But Flock's own webinars talk about its license plate reader's ability to track vehicles and people”
Directly from the investigation:
But the company’s own training videos show police using the system to track suspects “from location to location to location.”
And some of its cameras are designed to follow people as they walk.
“And they quite literally use AI to zoom in and follow you around whether you’re a person of interest or not,”
We need to ban Flock nationwide, this is the surveillance state being established
SCOTUS: Carpenter vs United States (2018): "Individuals have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the comprehensive record of their physical movements."
Flock cameras are in direct violation of the 4th Amendment.