Kit the Coyote
New member
why is this even worth mentioning?
has it led to a loss of civil liberties?
again - be specific (if you know)
what "controls" do the opponents of this fear?
Privacy groups started raising issues of police departments taking pictures of license plates of parked cars and building a database, the fear that developing such an integrated search system that would track the innocent as well as the guilty is a violation of the 4th Amendment protections against unreasonable search.
If the government were to tie all those camera systems into a single database with an effective facial recognition software system it would far exceed the data the license plate scheme would produce.
The courts are still out on this issue and have so far leaned in favor of the police in those cases on the basis of the police is able to see the license plate with or without the pictures taken. But there is an indication that the courts do have a limit on how far they are willing to let such electronic surveillance without probable cause go.
Recent rulings in relation to the use of GPS trackers and cell phone tracking indicates that if technology reaches the point where it did not just identify where a person is but tracks their movements at all times, that would rise to the level of an unwarranted search without probable cause.
This technology has that potential and thus the concern is ensuring that 4th amendment protections of privacy are not violated.