A federal Drug Enforcement Administration agent on a Chicago area task force used Palos Heights Detective Todd Hutchinson’s login credentials to perform unauthorized searches this past January. Group chat screenshots obtained via public records request show the detective and the feds discussing the incident.
But you’re saying, like, sure it’s dystopian and creepy and wrong, but why wouldn’t the creepy dystopia use the tech for all cases then rather than just some?
I’m also saying it’s not really any more creepy or dystopian than say … speed cameras. They’re there to catch people that break the law. If these cameras are already used to catch people breaking some laws, the logic of “well they should only be allowed to catch people who break these specific laws, but not these other laws” doesn’t make any sense.
If you know the license plate of a car of a wanted murderer, and the FLOCK camera system recognises that number plate, why on earth would anyone be against the FLOCK camera system arbitrarily not being allowed to be used to catch that murderer? Like what is the reasoning behind that train of thought?
I’m also saying it’s not really any more creepy or dystopian than say … speed cameras. They’re there to catch people that break the law. If these cameras are already used to catch people breaking some laws, the logic of “well they should only be allowed to catch people who break these specific laws, but not these other laws” doesn’t make any sense.
If you know the license plate of a car of a wanted murderer, and the FLOCK camera system recognises that number plate, why on earth would anyone be against the FLOCK camera system arbitrarily not being allowed to be used to catch that murderer? Like what is the reasoning behind that train of thought?