DO NOT point a minimum 1000nm wavelength green laser at Flock cameras. It will not damage the sensor and render the camera ineffective.
Flock cameras DO NOT contain over a half ounce of easily recyclable silver. The camera, router, solar panel, and battery, WILL NOT fetch over $1000 on the secondary market.
Flock is purely for your safety with NO OTHER AGENDA.
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Replies (22)
Man... I thought the laser would work 😆
👀
I do t understand what’s going on in the video
“Sorry about my husband”
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Someone did the hard work already.
At least some of it
But that community can't be serious if they use discord.
DeFlock Maps
DeFlock Maps | ALPR Camera Map & Privacy Routes
Explore ALPR camera locations and plan privacy-optimized routes across the United States.
Sniffing WiFi to find cameras.
Illegal Data Harvesting
In UK the residents just cut the cameras down.
They call them blade runners.
Here in Australia we paint over them and block them.
Why do Americans deep-throat the boot instead of defending themselves?
Are the police going to shoot you for offending the Jews if you broke a flock camera?
I don't get i
any known local retailers?
a laser
any brick and mortor outlets I can buy in cash?
💯 on the sentiment.
I think the laser spec might be a typo. A typical green laser is 532nm, as color is a function of wavelength. 1,000nm is outside the visible spectrum.
I'm thinking it should say 1,000 mW referring to the power necessary to damage the camers's sensor.
Looks like these run around $600 on initial search, so I agree that even with this additional info, you should NOT do this.
Not sure, depends where local is for you. Why not VPN + prepaid debit card + PO Box?
yes
Uk had carbon capture cameras for a long time now. They had certain zones if you entered it logged your license plate and if you left the zone it charged you for driving in that zone. Usa flock cameras are new. They just started popping up recently as in last year or so.
Using cameras to track license plates dates to the 1970s, when the U.K. was embroiled in a long-simmering conflict with the Irish Republican Army.
The Met, London’s police force, developed a system that used closed-circuit television cameras to monitor and record the license plates of vehicles entering and exiting major roads.
The system and its successors were seen as useful crime fighting tools. Over the next two decades, they expanded to other cities in the U.K. and around the world. In 1998, U.S. Customs and Border Protection implemented this technology. By the 21st century, it had started appearing in cities across the U.S.
There are different ways for a jurisdiction to implement these systems, but local governments usually sign contracts with private companies that provide the hardware and service.
These companies often entice authorities with free trials of surveillance equipment and promises of free access to their data in ways that bypass local oversight laws.
AI thrown into the mix
Recently, AI has been incorporated into these camera systems, significantly increasing their reach.
The vehicle information that’s captured is typically stored in the cloud, creating a massive web of data repositories. If a camera collects information from a suspect’s car or truck – say, one also listed in the National Crime Information Center – AI can flag it and send an instant alert to local law enforcement.
In fact, that’s a selling point of Flock Safety, one of the biggest providers of automatic license plate readers. The company uses infrared cameras to capture images of vehicles.
PO Boxes require KYC where I am
probably not going to find that in store to pay cash for
Agree but 1000nm is not green but infrared. Anyway there is a tech where an AI can locate hidden cameras by lenses reflection. Add that to a drone with a laser and teach them to take out every single camera they see around. Hope people would not do that...
I DO NOT RECOMNEND THIS.
(Learn about good OpSec when buying things and programming devices).
DO NOT point a minimum 1000nm wavelength green laser at Flock cameras. It will not damage the sensor and render the camera ineffective.
Flock cameras DO NOT contain over a half ounce of easily recyclable silver. The camera, router, solar panel, and battery, WILL NOT fetch over $1000 on the secondary market.
Flock is purely for your safety with NO OTHER AGENDA.
View quoted note →
