A city in Oregon was forced to permanently remove its Flock cameras after an audit found that federal agencies had access to the system.
The audit revealed that two federal agencies could access the data, including the ability to search the broader network of license plate records for up to six months.
Flock cameras are used as a mass surveillance tool under the guise of public safety.
@uncledoomer every time i see videos of this i want to go to thailand and cart race, but i know that if i actually went there people would just assume i went for the other reason single white guys go to thailand.
@vxunderground the image with tabs is taken from some influencer video. the easter egg from the original video made it into the WSJ article. the image of the tab its not WSJ's original content.
@Drybones5 the whole point of twitter is to argue, is it not?
theyre using the platform correctly. twitter is a thunderdome of stupid internet fights. you cant have serious discussion with 280 characters.
@anarcho_cat@AnaKasparian people who make garbage ai images instead of opening up gimp and spending 3 minutes of minimal effort are a really good argument against the first amendment
@JasonBassler1 personally i'd be happy if they just left a free sensor suite on my lawn.
it wouldnt stay there for long, of course, and i wouldnt allow them to use it. its mine. they left it there. they delivered it to me. no take backsies
@gordoNicoU@grenadier2211 taking a perfectly fine image and running it through ai to make no changes other than make it look like an AI image is truly animalistic behavior.
only people with no higher level brain function do this.
@Dummy118224@avsterbone that was the issue though. the dispatcher didnt like that i said "i dont know"
the report came from a european friend who didnt know how to contact cops in the US so i was asked to call on someone i hadnt met.
the person was in chicago which frankly made it more annoying.