Submitted via IRC for SoyCow3941
On Tuesday, one of the largest LPR manufacturers, ELSAG, announced a major upgrade to "allow investigators to search by color, seven body types, 34 makes, and nine visual descriptors in addition to the standard plate number, location, and time."
Such a vast expansion of the tech now means that evading such scans will be even more difficult.
For years, Ars has been reporting on automated license plate readers (ALPRs, or simply LPRs)—a specialized camera often mounted on police cars that can scan at speeds of up to 60 plates per second.
Those scans are compared against what law enforcement usually dubs a "hot list" before alerting the officer to the presence of a potentially wanted or stolen vehicle. All scans are typically kept in a police database for weeks, months, or years on end.
These devices are now in common use by cities big and small across the United States, as well as many countries around the globe, including the United Kingdom. Police at the upcoming royal wedding in London will use LPRs to monitor unauthorized vehicles.
(Score: -1, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 20 2018, @04:16AM
The man was moonscraping the feces when he saw... it. The man moved. The man moved, and it screamed. Its screams continued for hours before the silence came. The woman, having insufficiently appraised the men's rights, collapsed briefly. "Rot! Decay! Decompose!" The man spat out these words, his face wearing the wrathful expression.
Happily, the man returned to his quarters, leaving the woman to fester in its solitude.