Ars Technica used a public records request to obtain a large dataset of license plate scans from 33 License Plate Readers (LPRs) in Oakland, California:
OAKLAND, Calif.—If you have driven in Oakland any time in the last few years, chances are good that the cops know where you’ve been, thanks to their 33 automated license plate readers (LPRs).
Now Ars knows too.
In response to a public records request, we obtained the entire LPR dataset of the Oakland Police Department (OPD), including more than 4.6 million reads of over 1.1 million unique plates between December 23, 2010 and May 31, 2014. The dataset is likely one of the largest ever publicly released in the United States—perhaps in the world.
After analyzing this data with a custom-built visualization tool, Ars can definitively demonstrate the data's revelatory potential. Anyone in possession of enough data can often—but not always—make educated guesses about a target’s home or workplace, particularly when someone’s movements are consistent (as with a regular commute).
It seems the cars of police officers, politicians, and others doing the spying should have been captured by the LPRs too. A prize for the first person to separate out what they've been up to...
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 26 2015, @02:25PM
NoPhoto [nophoto.com] They are about to ship their 2nd generation. It detects the camera flash and flashes back its own high-intensity xenon light. Of course it only works when the camera uses a flash.
(Score: 2) by Kromagv0 on Thursday March 26 2015, @02:49PM
That is why I brought up the whole flashing and strobing thing. In my state those may not be entirely legal. Also depending on the xenon light and how it is aimed it may also be illegal.
T-Shirts and bumper stickers [zazzle.com] to offend someone