Via: AP:
Chances are, your local or state police departments have
photographs of your car in their files, noting where you were driving on
a particular day, even if you never did anything wrong.
Using automated scanners, law enforcement agencies across the country
have amassed millions of digital records on the location and movement
of every vehicle with a license plate, according to a study published
Wednesday by the American Civil Liberties Union. Affixed to police cars,
bridges or buildings, the scanners capture images of passing or parked
vehicles and note their location, uploading that information into police
databases. Departments keep the records for weeks or years, sometimes
indefinitely.
As the technology becomes cheaper and more ubiquitous, and
federal grants focus on aiding local terrorist detection, even small
police agencies are able to deploy more sophisticated surveillance
systems. While the Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that a judge’s approval
is needed to track a car with GPS, networks of plate scanners allow
police effectively to track a driver’s location, sometimes several times
every day, with few legal restrictions. The ACLU says the scanners
assemble what it calls a “single, high-resolution image of our lives.”
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