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Police and federal agencies (FBI, ICE, ATF, CBP) can search this massive database across states, often without local approval or your knowledge.
A tech expert warned that Flock integrates directly with Palantir, a data fusion platform. Peter Thiel, the founder of Palantir, is also one of Flock's primary investors.
Innocent people are already being wrongly accused, confronted at their homes, and treated like criminals because of faulty camera matches.
But people are fighting back, cutting down cameras, mapping every unit, building anti-surveillance rigs, and forcing cities to cancel contracts.
NOTE: The Need To Know News does not endorse damaging or destroying property damage or violating the law.
Text from Wall Street Apes:
California resident exposes what's really going on with Flock Cameras in America
"I want to be clear what these cameras actually are, and I say that with somebody with 20 years of experience in IT. I've served as the chief network architect for Fortune 500 companies, I've designed data centers, and today I work on cloud infrastructure for one of the largest loan origination companies in the country. I'm not speculating on how this technology works. I've read their patents and I know how it works.
Flock advertises these cameras as simple license plate readers. But their own patents tell a different story.
They're AI-powered surveillance machines that capture every passing vehicle and person and transmit that data to a private corporate cloud, making it queryable by a multitude of state and federal agencies. The city of Corona does not control that database, and Corona residents have no public record rights against a private company's servers. Our daily movements are being harvested by a $7.5 billion corporation, that only answers to venture capital investors, not to us. Flock did not reach that valuation on their per-camera subscription fees. That math doesn't add up.
The city council should also understand who they're doing business with. Flock CEO was asked whether the company had any federal contracts. He said no. That was a lie.
Public records revealed that Flock had been secretly running a pilot program giving the US Border Patrol access to local police camera data without the knowledge of the cities that paid for the cameras.