Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion
Electronic Frontier Foundation's Atlas of Surveillance - Printable Version

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Electronic Frontier Foundation's Atlas of Surveillance - upgrayedd - 10-27-2022

https://atlasofsurveillance.org/

It's practically a hobby of mine to spot cameras and other forms of surveillance. For instance, my local grocery store has 33 cameras.

This site is interesting to me because it's a database of surveillance technology. You can search locations or view a map. It's incomplete though, at least in my city. Within the major city, I was able to find documents of purchase orders for police tech - things like automatic license plate scanners for patrol cars (the computer automatically alerts the cop driving that a vehicle's registered owner has a warrant), drones, cell site simulators, and gun shot detection systems. I could see the actual brand and model of electronics, and from there I could find the marketing and training materials from the manufacturers site.

The suburban areas were lacking data though. I recall license plate readers being purchased by one local town that's not in the database. Most of the cameras on the map are just bank security cameras. I come across numerous other cameras daily and was hoping to find out more about them. I would like to know when facial recognition is being used, too.


RE: Electronic Frontier Foundation's Atlas of Surveillance - carrythenothing - 10-27-2022

(10-27-2022, 08:12 PM)upgrayedd Wrote: https://atlasofsurveillance.org/

It's practically a hobby of mine to spot cameras and other forms of surveillance. For instance, my local grocery store has 33 cameras.

This site is interesting to me because it's a database of surveillance technology. You can search locations or view a map. It's incomplete though, at least in my city. Within the major city, I was able to find documents of purchase orders for police tech - things like automatic license plate scanners for patrol cars (the computer automatically alerts the cop driving that a vehicle's registered owner has a warrant), drones, cell site simulators, and gun shot detection systems. I could see the actual brand and model of electronics, and from there I could find the marketing and training materials from the manufacturers site.

The suburban areas were lacking data though. I recall license plate readers being purchased by one local town that's not in the database. Most of the cameras on the map are just bank security cameras. I come across numerous other cameras daily and was hoping to find out more about them. I would like to know when facial recognition is being used, too.

You can submit data: https://atlasofsurveillance.org/collaborate


RE: Electronic Frontier Foundation's Atlas of Surveillance - bjcheung77 - 10-28-2022

Wow, interesting. This reminds me of the sites for "cheap gas" in the city or neighboring cities...