
I’ve been using FlockHopper, it is taking public data on where current FLOCK cameras are located and re-routing you to avoid being illegally surveilled on. [More]
Not to rain on anybody’s parade, but wouldn’t you also need to disable or shield your cell phone and have an older car without signal capabilities to truly conceal your route? And noting how many cameras there are, how on earth could you plan trips to avoid them all and get from here to there? I’m also wondering if a prosecutor might consider having/activating the app as circumstantial evidence to build a premeditation case.
Then there’s always the power to subpoena FlockHopper records. I don’t expect a developer who collects data for purchases to pull a Lawrence DeStefano and go to jail rather than turn over what he’s got.
If I’m all wet, let me know. I was wrong once back in ’58 and I still hear about it on occasion.
Tangentially-Related UPDATE
Now Anti-ALPR license plate covers are an idea I could get behind. So it figures the surveillance state has gotten in front of it.
[Via Alan Chwick]
Regularly travel from San Antonio to Freeport.
Avoid the interstate but wave to the Flock cams populating nearly every town along old 90 to 36 and right into Freeport.
Even recording passage into and out of those hardware stores with the blue and the orange signs…those for ‘theft prevention’ of course.
“Flock, generating, compiling and retaining the patterns of your life for use by entities you may never have heard of for reasons not discussed.”
Hey, if you’ve not done anything you’ve no reason to worry.