If you have an IP-enabled security camera, you can download some free, open-source software from GitHub and boom—you have a fully functional automated license plate reader, reports ArsTechnica .
Matt Hill, OpenALPR's founder, told Ars technica "I'm a big privacy advocate... now you've got LPR just in the hands of the government, which isn't a good thing."
Will "they" like it when "we" have a crowdsourced database of where and when congressmen, judges and cops go throughout their work day?
Does this level the playing field? Open yet another can of worms? Both?
(Score: 2) by frojack on Sunday December 06 2015, @08:36PM
As the summary implied, we'd need a list of government officials, lobbyists etc. and their plate numbers.
Those are far from the only people that one might want to monitor. But they are also the people that would have no problem getting their plates changed for no other reason than that plate having appeared in some public database.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.