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Comment by loteck

7 hours ago

In my town, we have Flock. I request the audit logs that show how police are searching the Flock system.

In November 2025 and prior, the logs were listed by USERID and I could independently correlate quantity of searches by USERID to detect unusual search behavior. This same methodology has been used to catch police stalking in at least one other city.

In December 2025, Flock decided to "improve" its system. All searches on the audit log are now completely serialized, anonymized. This "improvement" came after 2025 turned out several cases of police stalking using Flock.

I would guess the only way to make this data available long term is by regulation. Then again, I would hope Flock is subject to FOIA already if they are collaborating with state or local law enforcement...

  • YC CEO funded Flock and is involved in politics to remove police regulations

    To quote him responding to criticism against Flock: "You're thinking Chinese surveillance. US-based surveillance helps victims and prevents more victims."

    • Cameras are free speech and are a shield against property crimes and assault.

      Our building complex has rampant break-ins. We've needed more cameras for years and we're only now starting to add them.

      Worse, someone recently someone set fire to the roof which caused a 12-hour long debacle. Not sure what the "#-of-alarms fire" ranking it was, but several people lost their homes to months of remediation and they tore apart the roof.

      Cameras would have implicated the contractor responsible (we know it was a contractor, but there were no cameras or access logs).

      One theory as to why the number of violent crimes is going down in this country isn't that we just de-leaded the water and taught better conflict de-escalation, but that there are cameras and smartphones everywhere.

      All of that said - camera networks in the hands of an all-powerful state are bad.

      The state does not need access to these systems outside of a rigorously documented system with proper judicial oversight. We need regulations and even civil liberties that limit the scope of state access and state dragnets to these camera networks.

      But individuals, companies, and communities should be at liberty to hire surveillance tech to protect their persons and their property.

      8 replies →

  • FOIA does not apply outside government entities. Maybe you can get the data from the entity itself, but good luck.

Can you FOIA some unique identifier of the officers (badge number, name, etc) associated with the serialized searches?

On the subject of those Flock cameras, it really is amazing how much high-purity copper they manage to put in one of those. They might as well be putting ingots of copper on those poles.

Two independent studies established that police families experience higher rates of domestic violence than the rest of the population.

Do not let your loved ones get romantically involved with cops.