45 comments

  • Arrath 9 hours ago ago

    Good, such records shouldn't be exempt. So what if they were gathered by a third party, it was a service carried out under request of the local government/law enforcement, and paid for by public money.

    • caymanjim 4 hours ago ago

      Such records shouldn't exist in the first place. I agree they shouldn't be exempt if they do, but let's not just accept that it's okay to have a fleet of cameras recording us 24/7 everywhere we go, managed by a private entity, accessed freely and without any probable cause by local and federal agencies who don't even communicate with each other.

      • Arrath 3 hours ago ago

        > Such records shouldn't exist in the first place.

        Oh I agree 100%

      • stuaxo 3 hours ago ago

        In a country with stronger privacy this would be law.

    • WarOnPrivacy 6 hours ago ago

      > Good, such records shouldn't be exempt.

      Absolutely. Govs fight transparency to hide their actions - ultimately so they can avoid accountability.

    • unyttigfjelltol an hour ago ago

      Not quibbling, but preservation and production of these records has really minimal connection to the public purpose behind sunshine laws. It reveals the fact of suspicionless mass surveillance, but the monitoring is not of or about government functions. Clearly the drafters of a law were not imaginative enough to foresee the dystopian turn government has taken, but let’s face it: if someone put that surveillance camera in the courthouse, which is more connected to public sunshine, the analysis might have gone differently.

  • carimura 6 hours ago ago

    These camera's are on all 3 egress routes from our home. I asked our local sheriff's department if they could use these to enforce state-wide curfews and after hemming and hawing they admitted "if it was a crime than in theory, yes".

    • burnt-resistor 2 hours ago ago

      Drone, paint can, mud, or a very heavy hat. Until they're made too expensive to maintain, they'll stay in business selling your movements to data brokers, police, intelligence agencies, stalkers, thieves, and/or scammers to mine for all time for any reason at all.

      • actionfromafar 2 hours ago ago

        ” brokers, police, intelligence agencies, stalkers, thieves, and/or scammers”

        Why use the full name? They are known as Palantir.

  • Terr_ 3 hours ago ago

    Some may argue the collected public driving information is too dangerous/sensitive to be available under the PRA... But in that case it's ALSO too dangerous/sensitive for them to be aggregating it uncontrolled in the first place.

    So I see this as a good ruling: While I don't want my driving data public, I'd rather everyone's be equally public, rather than allowing shady and unaccountable forces to decide who "deserves" privacy and who doesn't.

    In other words, if Elon Musk or Local Town Mayor can surveil my daily drives, I should be able to see theirs too.

    ____

    Aside: Imagine a journalistic cooperative that uses similar cameras to record all traffic at the driveways of the rich/politicians, airports, luxury hotels and resorts, etc.

    Magically, legislators will acquire opinions against such systems... though not necessarily honest or evenhanded ones, that'll still be a problem.

  • Wistar 7 hours ago ago

    There are quite a few private Flock camera installations (HOA, neighborhood, business) in my locale. I assume those are exempt from FOIA requests but wonder if law enforcement can access that data.

    • tptacek 7 hours ago ago

      Those private installations are almost certainly not subject to FOIA (they wouldn't be in Illinois, hard to see how they would be in any state). Without a court order, none of them should be exposed to law enforcement, though there might be opt-out features that have that effect.

      • Wistar 7 hours ago ago

        I was wondering if Flock shares the private-contract camera data with law enforcement.

        • gusgus01 6 hours ago ago

          It comes down to the individual agreements that those private-contract cameras have with Flock, which unfortunately means it might be a case by case basis to understand if any one has conditions that allow sharing with law enforcement. IT was recently discovered that local police departments that had Flock contracts that limited the police department's access did not restrict general access, so Flock could still use it how they wanted and let federal agencies (ICE) use it: https://www.aclu.org/news/privacy-technology/flock-massachus...

  • jmpman 8 hours ago ago

    https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/08/us/melodee-buzzard-missing-se...

    How was all of this data gathered without being a violation?

    • FireBeyond 8 hours ago ago

      This is a reasonably common (sadly) methodology that many agencies utilize.

      "We are not legally permitted to blanket surveil/ALPR entire neighborhoods/towns, etc. ...

      ... and we can't pay a private company to do this for us ...

      ... but nothing prevents us from paying a private company who is doing it already, to give us that data."

      The line between the last two is blurry but also utilized - you can't put out an RFP for a company to capture such data that you're not permitted to, but if that company is doing it because it sees a/your market for it, then it's a free-for-all.

      • deaux 5 hours ago ago

        Flock (YC S17)

        Bets on this strategy having been part of their seed pitch deck? Guess they would've left it out, keeping it as nudge nudge wink wink and discussing during QA.

        • blitzar 2 hours ago ago

          > YC S17

          Ahh that year was somewhere between blockchain and ai - no surprise they would default back to surveillance capitalism, go with what you know.

        • jackstraw42 4 hours ago ago

          > Flock (YC S17)

          Ah, and there it is. Why shouldn't Y-Combinator be a force for evil like the rest of them? Paul Graham has been off his rocker for about as long as I can remember now, unfortunately my memories of people like this doing anything good for the world are so far in the past, they're fading. What a shame.

          • lightedman an hour ago ago

            "Why shouldn't Y-Combinator be a force for evil like the rest of them?"

            We should figure out a way to hold YC accountable for their helping these companies screw our rights and privacy.

      • RHSeeger 7 hours ago ago

        And, I assume, you can pay them to put up a "this is how fast you are going, slow down" sign. And they can add a camera to it, that has nothing to do with you paying them to put it up in the first place... and then sell them access to data from the camera.

        • FireBeyond 5 hours ago ago

          Yeah, it's very nudge nudge wink wink. Which is why Flock advertises to HOAs and private businesses too. Because then they'll agree to share their data and hey look, Flock can say "we have ALPR and other data from this HOA, you can have it because you didn't ask us to get it for you".

  • upboundspiral 2 hours ago ago

    One thing that shocked me is how pervasive flock is. Major US cities have hundreds if not thousands of flock cameras https://deflock.me/map.

    I truly believe that technology like this, implemented in the way that it is, is incredibly dangerous. They are creating a nationwide spynet, selling everyone's information, and lying about this fact. Both sides of the political isle will inevitably abuse this power. It needs to be pushed back against strongly now and forever more. I encourage people to show up to city council meetings if adding flock to your city is on the agenda. And if it is already in your city then the contract will need to be renewed at some point and you can contest it then. Emailing your representatives is not always effective, but if thousands of people do so then it does start making a dent.

    Denver town hall where multiple sources of flock lying and deceiving the government and the people are brought up: https://youtu.be/OR_qolqQ2fM

  • exmadscientist 9 hours ago ago

    Anyone have or know how to dig up the opinion? It looks like (but I'm not sure that) this is Skagit County Superior Court case number 252007173, but that doesn't seem to get me very far.

  • p_ing 10 hours ago ago

    Full title too long for HN: Court denies request that it find Flock Safety camera data is exempt from Public Records Act

  • Hendrikto 6 hours ago ago

    > 451: Unavailable due to legal reasons

    > We recognize you are attempting to access this website from a country belonging to the European Economic Area (EEA) including the EU which enforces the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and therefore access cannot be granted at this time. For any issues, contact classified@skagitpublishing.com or call 360-424-3251.

    • deaux 5 hours ago ago

      Every time I see this in the comments it's funny that they don't block me while connecting from country whose digital privacy laws are basically an even stronger version of the GDPR. Tells you about their true reasoning.

      • kelnos 2 hours ago ago

        Not sure what country you live in, but my guess would be that your country hasn't made the same kind of noises about how wide-ranging GDPR enforcement actions can be.

        Personally I don't know about non-EU/UK countries with GDPR-style (or stronger) laws, so if I were operating a website that needed GDPR compliance (and decided to instead block visitors from the EU/UK), I probably would have no idea about needing to do something about visitors from your country.

        So I expect their "true reasoning" is just ignorance.

      • almostnormal 2 hours ago ago

        From which country are you connecting?

      • cylemons 3 hours ago ago

        seriously, what would their true reasoning be

  • CalChris 9 hours ago ago
  • 1970-01-01 8 hours ago ago

    This is just step 1 of many. The lawyers at Fluck will appeal. I know what I typed.

  • shawn_w 8 hours ago ago

    If you're out driving on public roads do you really have any expectation of privacy? Anybody can take a picture of your car...

    Another non-paywalled article on the case: https://www.king5.com/article/news/investigations/investigat...

    • calmbonsai 8 hours ago ago

      Courts have found that scale and intent matter.

      An offhand picture by a private individual is OK, but a large scale organized hoovering of personally identifying information is not OK.

      The finding is also the denial of an exemption appeal which has a much lower legal threshold to clear.

    • pilingual 7 hours ago ago

      > Anybody can take a picture of your car

      But they don't.

      Once my car drove by a Google street view vehicle. I thought it was cool. If a Google street view vehicle (or, nowadays, Amazon truck) drove circles around my neighborhood collecting wearabouts of all cars I'd find that concerning.

      The way these camera systems are set up is tantamount to an ankle monitor. Who wants to live like that?

    • AnthonyMouse 6 hours ago ago

      > If you're out driving on public roads do you really have any expectation of privacy?

      Expectation of privacy generally comes from taking steps to preserve it. If you put curtains on your windows, any rando can't install a hidden camera in your house to see what's happening behind them. If you don't install curtains on your windows, any rando can stand in the street and see what they see.

      The government prohibits you from concealing the number plate on your car. They can't reasonably prohibit you from doing the thing that would establish an expectation of privacy and then use the fact that you didn't do it to say that you don't have one.

    • 1shooner 6 hours ago ago

      Would you accept the government require you to wear a private company's gps tracker whenever you are in public?

      • Terr_ 3 hours ago ago

        A somewhat-milder equivalent would be a law that requires you to have a personal ID number visibly affixed to both your front and back at all times outdoors.

        Sure, it's tradition, but license-plates started being required over a hundred years ago and the tradeoffs and dangers were not the same.