It's commercialized stalking. A group of people who physically stood in each park every day photographing children playing and sharing those images between each other would be run out of town so quick. Laws would be invented in a heartbeat to stop this.
Never forget, There are people here who are very proud of the system they built.
No person should be tracked by default.
There should not be any system that allows a person to be continuously tracked at all times short of as a consequence of criminal activity with a judge signing off on it.
It's so basic that a 3rd grader gets it.
Imagine the uproar if flock were used for automatic speeding tickets.
(which... we should, if we have the data to do it, why not actually enforce traffic laws?)
I'm infuriated with this narrative because I can then be in my own private backyard with a fence and still be susceptible to surveillance. What the people who own the surveillance narrative really mean is that if they can record you, whether in private or not, you have no expectation of privacy.
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If Flock feels this way the executive team should record the entrances and exits of their homes and stream them live online 24/7.