If Flock's customers, using Flock's infrastructure or tooling, can share data with each other, that would be bad.
I'm not saying that's what's happening, but that's what I thought was happening before reading this thread, and now I have to go and run through their policies.
Either way ALPRs and AI-facial scanners in public are a huge violation of privacy and I loathe them, but I hope it's correct that Flock customers cannot easily share information with one another.
> If Flock's customers, using Flock's infrastructure or tooling, can share data with each other, that would be bad.
Ex-employee of Flock here, that's ABSOLUTELY what's happening.
And what's more Flock lets them do so even when they know the agencies are legally not permitted to do so. They turn a blind eye, say it's not their problem to enforce ("oh, doing so in state X is illegal? Well, even if your agency is in state X, we didn't disable that feature"), then happily provide training to do enable those agencies to do so (and it's a nudge nudge wink wink part of the sales process.)
That's absolutely what is happening.
https://www.courthousenews.com/california-drivers-accuse-flo...
Sharing data between customers is a large part of the point of the product.