New Software Puts License Plate Scanners Into Citizens' Hands (arstechnica.com) 238
An anonymous reader writes: Automated license plate readers have become a serious point of contention between law enforcement and privacy-minded citizens. But the advance of technology might make it a moot point — with some open source software and a cheap webcam, anyone can now start cataloging the cars visiting their street. A two-man team developed OpenALPR and started distributing it for free, along with the source code. Law enforcement and the agencies that build their plate scanners have argued in favor of the legality of such data collection, so it's not like they can suddenly start cracking down on private citizens doing the same. "An enterprising person could even use a car-mounted camera and create a mobile plate hunting device along the lines of what many police agencies already use." Is this particular privacy fight one that's still winnable?
Not the end of privacy (Score:2)
I believe paint ball guns are still legal.
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Yes, but firing them at people who haven't agreed to a game is not. Enjoy getting arrested and/or shot with real gun.
Re:Not the end of privacy (Score:5, Funny)
Nah, why get all that fussed. Quite simply make it 'administratively illegal' and apply a fine for each and every incidence where substantive data capture and storage has occurred. Do it a few times who cares, do it a few hundreds times, a warning, do it a few thousands times, final warning and do it tens of thousands of times, no way that can be accidental, pay a fine per incidence. Same with any sane and sound privacy law. Seek to much and keep to much and when you get caught pay a fine per incidence, require a payment to the affected individuals and for repeat offenders mandate a custodial sentence.
Much like traffic offence you need to adjust punishments to real harm and according to the number of victims. So should M$ be prosecuted for Windows anal probe 10, especially when the forced elements of it into windows 7 without permission and forced upgrades to windows 10, of course, will corrupt governments do it, absolutely not because M$ is giving them a backdoor to allow it to continue to happen, not in every country.
To say that as a free person I no longer own my private self, is to say slavery is back and in full force and when it comes to your private self others, the elite, own it, up to and including direct physical sexual assault as witnessed at every American airport on a daily basis. Those are not air line passengers any more, they are slaves who are having their position in society, that of a slave with no right to a private physical self, reinforced. Keep in mind private jet, no search, not a slave,a member of the elite. Public transport, now that's for slaves who have no right to a private self, none at all, at an airport or in their own home.
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Plate readers have existed since plates were mandated - they just used to be very expensive to feed, this is a technological advancement that has reduced the cost of plate reading by several orders of magnitude. A logical outcome of the advancement of available computer power per $.
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Plate readers have existed since plates were mandated - they just used to be very expensive to feed
A lot longer than that! They used to have to read the door plates and know all the house emblems.
community 'crime' watch organizations (Score:3)
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What is an Apple camp out?
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Maybe 4-ish years ago, I called my local police department to see if they would want to work with crime watch organizations that installed cheap FOSS license plate readers to monitor traffic into various neighborhoods. At the time, they were only interested in using that technology to monitor the neighborhoods where most of the crimes occur, rather than worrying about the mostly sleepy suburbs.
FOSS license plate readers are here. Just wait for the facial recognition software to complement it. We'll know
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I have 1080P HD cameras outside my home, I certainly want this reader software looking at my driveway to catalog who has been here.
Considering that I can get 8 megapixel security cameras if I went to the high end ones, suddenly you can get enough data from a single picture to really nail things down.
The sad part is guys like me that likes to tinker and casinos are the only ones that have this stuff. Gas stations and other businesses as well as the state cameras are all 40 year old 480line interlaced garba
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The ones I've seen in my town are on the Repo tow trucks. When they don't have a hot lead they just cruse parking lots waiting for a hit.
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Police can lose and have lost their jobs over accessing the information without a valid reason.
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No, instead of selling the data directly, he instead acts more like a mafia leader in a shakedown by intimidating people with the fear of retribution if they don't tithe!
Re: community 'crime' watch organizations (Score:2)
Imagine God runs a benovelent society with many chapters. Membership is free. Donations are gladly accepted.
'Tithing' is the local elected president getting on the road to becoming a mafioso.
Unmarked police cars (Score:5, Interesting)
After watching police documentaries I often thought that surveillance of police station car parks would give you a good list of unmarked (and marked) police car VRNs. Couple that with static (entry points to housing estates, etc.) or vehicle mounted cameras and you have automated early warning of police in your area.
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"Couple that with static (entry points to housing estates, etc.) or vehicle mounted cameras and you have automated early warning of police in your area."
Sure, but it will also recognize the plates of my mother-in-law and automatically shutting the lights off and locking all the doors.
Or when that creep who's seeing my daughter drives by or in general any unknown car that repeatedly drives through with no reason could be a clue that something shifty is going on.
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You are projecting and you are disturbing. I hope you never come to my neighborhood.
Well, if he does, you'll get an alert from the license plate monitoring system to warn you that "AC is coming down the driveway!" Which will be really confusing, since it'll say that every time you come home too.
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Hiring a crack head to take photos of all cars entering and leaving the police parking garage over the course of 2 days will give you the same. It's been done for decades by criminals that have more than 80 iq points.
Luckily most criminals don't have more than that.
Re: Unmarked police cars (Score:2)
Well could it be that police has been described as acting like an occupation force in many places in the USA?
Let's see what happens.... (Score:4, Insightful)
...when the first guy sets up right in front of the police station. Or better yet, in front of the officer having an affair's house.
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Ironically perhaps, that is a valid line of reasoning in this case, since this isn't a privacy issue. These are police officers - paid officials on duty - that are being recorded, so there's no expectation of privacy.
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...when the first guy sets up right in front of the city's administrative offices. Or better yet, in front of the politician having an affair's house.
FTFY Police aren't the ones setting these policies.
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Forget that. Hook it up to 'police vehicle recognition' (pretty easy in the UK, they all have common markers) and start tracking police vehicles.
"3am, on the A42 just south of Oxford. Nope, hasn't seen a police car for eight months: Hit it!"
Maybe track police vehicles? (Score:2, Interesting)
If enough of us nerds have these and aggregate the data, we can see where the cops are going and make sure they are out and about doing their jobs. As the summary says, it cuts both ways. Start watching the watchers.
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If enough of us nerds have these and aggregate the data, we can see where the cops are going and make sure they are out and about doing their jobs. As the summary says, it cuts both ways. Start watching the watchers.
Also where the politicians are spending their time (and our money). Remember Gary Hart?
District court (Score:5, Interesting)
I was summoned to district court for an 8:00 AM hearing, and discovered - quite by accident - that the judge didn't bother to arrive until 10:00 AM. My lawyer mentioned that this was typical.
Everyone had to wait around and was forced to listen to some insipid video about drunk driving (irrelevant to my landlord/tenant purpose) for two hours over and over before the judge bothered to arrive.
I've often wondered how useful it would be to mount a trail camera behind the courthouse and log the judge's arrival times, and then make that information public. Say, 6 months of study.
I wonder how long it will be before someone modifies this software to automatically log the comings and goings of government servants to a public website.
I'd be interested to know if the people I'm paying (with my taxes) are putting in a full 40 hours.
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Anyone care to comment on the legality of using ANPR in public? In most countries having CCTV cover public areas is acceptable. I imagine the police would be irritated if someone, say, set up a web site for clients to upload data to and then displayed a map with the location of police cars on it, but are there any specific laws against it?
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In most countries having CCTV cover public areas is acceptable.
Know a list? There certain is a lot of places where CCTV is heavily restricted.
Re: District court (Score:2)
Or illegal to be explode like in Germany and Austria.
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Or illegal to be explode like in Germany and Austria.
I am truly at a loss here. I think I'm pretty good at parsing typo and ESL text. I can even get the gist from machine translations. This one baffles me. Exploding cameras? I think those are probably illegal in more than Germany or Austria.
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Exploit?
Or, assuming some machine translation fubar, whatever the complex concatenated German word for 'put out on a massive scale' is.
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That might be it! I was at "explore" when I got to the point of typing out a reply. I'd tried a bunch of words that began with E and a bunch that might be synonyms for explode but I didn't think of "exploit."
But exploited by whom? How? It's very iffy even then. Usually the GGP makes sense (I've seen 'em post before) but that one is beyond me. I tried thinking of what words might be automatically turned into that by a phone's keyboard. I probably spent a few minutes trying to figure it out before I gave up a
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In the men's room?
Really?
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No, he's a realist and a pragmatist.
Record conversations in the office and people will go elsewhere to talk.
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I know it is probably an unpopular idea, but I've long been of the notion that if you choose to work for the government, you should be at the ready to lose your personal privacy during work hours, because you work for the citizens. Especially those in elected positions in which power can be abused, there should not be a single conversation that cannot-
Sorry, national-security-speech-and-debate robble robble.
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>that if we weren't actively working on something else
I have mastered the art of looking busy behind a keyboard while accomplishing very little.
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I have mastered the art of looking busy behind a keyboard while accomplishing very little.
No need to brag. This is also true of almost everyone else here on Slashdot. ;-)
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If someone has a court date(or doctors appointment) at 8:00 AM the judge(or doctor) has an obligation to be there at that time. It is not like the OP just wandered in and demanded a hearing.
Do you know what could happen to someone that is late for a court date?
What the fuck is wrong with you?
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If court is to begin session at 8 AM, then the judge should be there, at 8AM, to begin session. Not show up at the courthouse at 8 AM and attend to other business. If the roles were reversed, one would presumably be going to jail. I therefore completely disagree that the judge gets a pass and that this guy is "out of line and very assholish".
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A judge can take away your freedom but an IT staff member can take away your minesweeper!
Seriously though, sometimes shit happens - no matter who you are and how important you are. Even the President of the United States has been late to things. Shit happens. So long as it's not a habit then let's not get our knickers into a ruffle just yet. With the judge, they could have been out dealing with a crises, like domestic violence, where they needed to enact a variety of things in a very short time-frame and di
DMV data required (Score:4, Insightful)
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You could use it to track, say, unmarked police vehicles. Does not matter who is driving them and it would not be hard to collect a large database of them.
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This is not all that helpful or useful unless you can connect to the DMV databases that links the plate to the person.
It's totally helpful if you can connect it to any database with meaningful information...including one that you yourself assemble.
For example...issue an FOIA request for the plate registrations of all vehicles registered to a specific jurisdiction.
Or simply do the simplest of data mining for the plate numbers that are seen...if they pass through the sensor at least a few times in a 2 week period, it's a damned sure bet that they are either the personal or work vehicles of employees there. A bit of manual f
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While access to such a database would be a game changer, it is not true that it is completely useless without it, as there are other ways to tie plates to people, albeit on a much smaller scale. Suppose I want to keep a watch on my wife and coworkers. It would be pretty easy to see who gets in and out of what car at work, and if I can't figure out my wife's license plate then I guess it
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I considered cobbling together a system like this in 2011, coupled with a speed gun and driver photographing camera - mounted in my mailbox. Speed limit on our street is 20mph, but we get cars coming around our (blind) curve at 50+ at all hours - perhaps only 8 or 10 times a month, often enough to be a concern, not often enough to easily catch.
I happened to hear one coming once while I was out walking, and managed to get a visual ID of the occupants, that one was a divorced dad bringing his daughter home w
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I love it when it's some dumb pizza driver. I nailed some low IQ, 20 something punk blasting down the residential street at 60 by calling his store and describing the car to the manager. She was very upset and thanked me for reporting him.
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You are so wrong.
Imagine I own a store and I want to know as much about my customers as possible. I can place this license plate reader on the entrances and exits to my parking lot. With each purchase I have access to what was purchased when. With a little bit of statistical analysis I can place plates to buyers by comparing when I saw a car come and go to the time stamp on purchases.
For the rare visitor I may only know the state and county of the customer from the automated data. If the software does n
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I started out as a sysadmin and had access to everyone's email and files. I thought it'd be great to dig up some dirt, find out who was fucking who etc. After a short time, the novelty wears off and you realise the info you thought would be interesting actually isn't. So the Sales manager is fucking his PA, or the marketing team are coke fiends, or the IT manager is stealing hardware and selling it on eBay. It all becomes uninteresting really quickly and you wonder why you've
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issue is not privacy.... (Score:3)
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LCD plates (Score:3)
Let's start using LCD panels for plates. The number changes every 12 hours or so. Police could still use it to match it based on the date/time it was scanned, but makes scanning by private citizens useless. #maintainthestatusquo
Re:LCD plates (Score:4, Insightful)
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Sounds like a plan, you first. You need to give us $15,000 for your new license plate, it's easily broken and you have ot pay for a replacement or face a $10,000 fine for having it broken.
The issue is transparency (Score:2)
If we do this enough, maybe "they" will understand why this technology is such a privacy violation.
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No, they won't understand that, mostly because it isn't a privacy violation by any stretch of the imagination. What, pray tell, makes you think that a number you display to all onlookers in public is private information?
It's the data that's valuable and interesting (Score:2)
2 4 (Score:5, Insightful)
Yet another nice thing about riding a bicycle: no license plate.
Dammit, slashdot! (Score:2)
Thanks for eating the > sign in the intended "2 > 4" subject line.
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I did preview, as I always do, and it doesn't preview the subject line. Also, if you put "2 > 4" in the comment section, you don't need to escape the '>' character, so why should the subject be different?
So you're admitting, on a site supposedly for techies, that you didn't bother to take 30 seconds and test this for yourself before going straight to the flaming?
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So, I'm not the AC but I did just decide to test this:
http://i.imgur.com/fM16Oat.png [imgur.com]
The subject is included in the preview - see the above linked image. Pardon the colors, that's just Stylish talking. I prefer a darker screen.
So, on a techie site you are admitting you thought someone would not, in fact, check to see if it did preview the subject line? Talk about flaming...
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It's not a reply. It is a new post. Go to the top of this particular thread and you'll see their preview. 'Snot hard. It is the same no matter if you have JavaScript enabled or not. It even previews the subject line in a plain text browse (Lynx) as I recall.
I've been scanning plates for months from my car. (Score:3, Interesting)
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It all started when I decided to use my old mobile phone (android) as a dash cam in February this year. At first I wrote a single app to record video footage from the road. It can store on average up to 3 days of footage that can be then sent to my home server over WIFI when I park my car in front of my house. In April, however, I also added a plate recognition subsystem. It performs surprisingly well for such a cheap solution. Now I can tag plate numbers and assign notifications for specific tags. For example I receive a sound notification when I am passing my boss/friends/work colleagues. I also have a separate group for people who I have seen driving badly before. It generates a warning sound whenever the camera spots them. :-]
Nice. Is it open source somewhere?
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being in public is public (Score:2)
What's the issue here? When you're in public, you have no expectation of privacy. We might have gotten used to being anonymous most of the time, but there's nothing inherent or ethical about that...
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I think it's about degree and it's more about that than anything else. There are shades of privacy and anonymity, they're not binary. So, we're reducing our level of privacy and to what end? What is the goal here and is it worth the change in the way things are now?
By my definition, that kind of fits the word ethics nicely. Ethics are situational and morals are absolute. There's nothing immoral about this but there may be something unethical here. There's some debate there but I tend to end up on the side o
Potentially not winable... (Score:2)
The plate readers represent a two edged sword which likely is a far more power tool for committing crime than it will help enforcing the law. Passively scanning cars will create a register for when a car passed a spot allowing criminals easy ways to match cars with for homes, owners and family members, letting criminals do passive and active planning of potential victims.
We cannot make the readers go away, so we would need to do something with the plates instead. This could technically be done as the plate
Difference (Score:2)
I still maintain there is a difference between the technology, like a person or org could make, and a government program. I would also contend that since they are so distributed, and their misuse of data, can have such serious consequences for others, that whether or not the police should be permitted to use their resources on something is quite a different question from whether private individuals should be able to persue it. The police should have more restrictions on them.
Is it time to take the license plates off my car? (Score:2)
We don't need further tracking of our lives by the government or by the people trying to sell us stuff. I noticed advertising in my web browser based off of things I searched for on other sites. This is no doubt from tracking of my IP address or shared cookies. With this software am I going to get advertising based off of what shops I drove past that day?
No doubt this will lower the cost of entry for petty tyrants in law enforcement that want to track people without cause or warrant. A device with licen
nothing new (Score:2)
An iSpy plugin for license plate reading has been around for many years: http://www.ispyconnect.com/plu... [ispyconnect.com]
Private misuse can be prevented (Score:2)
If misuse becomes a problem, we could have have smart license plates that show a periodically changing QR code that contains a random (but validatable) message encrypted with user's key. Then a proper authority can try all the keys in database (could use salt as a hint, but really even a billion keys does not take that long) until they find a valid message after decryption.
One could even discourage random snooping / girlfriend stalking by cops on the beat by giving them instant access to only smaller databa
NY, MD, etc (Score:2)
They will ban it soon. They don't like things like conversations being recorded, especially political conversations where they lie because they lie all the time. I'm sure they're going places they shouldn't as well.
Technology - making it harder to be a twit.
Not that new (Score:2)
There are a number of ANPR packages available.
One that's of particular interest to me snaps plates and calculates vehicle speeds - I live in a street with a particularly irksome speeding problem (some drivers are regularly hitting 80-90mph in a 30mph zone) that the local authoritries refuse to address.
It's known they've run long-term speedchecks on the road but have repeatedly refused FOI requests for the data, although it's known that "The average speeds is 33mph, so that's OK" - they went silent and start
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Re: This hurts privacy rights. Defending Crimina (Score:2)
Which is why a citizens network of ALPR cameras would be useful.
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Distributed identification & reporting of tailgaters - Store 30-60 seconds of video leading up to and following a tailgating event, tag it with location, speed, plate number (where available), then let the tailgaters' insurers have at it (or sue 'em outright for all they're worth, since they are gambling with your life).
That's one good use. Also, we had a couple of turds that like to speed down my street. As in 55 in a 25 mph zone type speeding. I've already given a few license plate numbers via regular digital camera to the local police, who haven't arrested them, but paid them a friendly visit. Seems to help a lot.
Can't help it if I accidentally leave my car vidcam turned on now, can I?
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You gave no evidence of someone doing 55 in a 25(do you have a way to measure their speed? You can tell someone is speeding but you don't how fast it actually was) and you actually expected some official act from a cop?
LAWL
The cop gave them a warning. That's all they needed. A simple metter of telling them there were complaints, and even slashdotters should know that the police act on complaints. Regardless, without anything but a camera, I can pretty precisely tell what speed they were moving, with a method that would stand up in court. Do you know how I would do it?
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Yes.
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Stop being an awful nerd lording a modicum of knowledge over people. This is why nobody likes you. And no, no, I really don't care if you're going to make me beg.
Actually I'm willing to share it with anyone. I thought as a knowledable guy such as yourself I might have bored you.
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He didn't claim he could secure a conviction in court with his evidence, he stated that he could accurately determine their speed.
I believe him, within certain tolerances.
"Dear Police, this bloke was speeding" will get a polite "Thank you"
"Dear Police, here's evidence of this bloke doing 53 in a 35 limit. I know it wont hold up in court but perhaps a friendly word would help" will get someone a knock on the door.
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and you actually expected some official act from a cop?
Yes, and he actually got an official act from a cop. Can't you read?
I've already given a few license plate numbers via regular digital camera to the local police, who haven't arrested them, but paid them a friendly visit. Seems to help a lot.
I've reported a few people over the years for (what I considered to be) dangerous driving and/or driving while using phones. My local cops are more than happy to take the details and call up the drivers. They've usually made it plain that it was unlikely to lead to any official sanction, although on a couple of occasions what I've reported has concerned them enough to ask if I was prepared to state such-and-such in court (I was; I didn't en
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Obviously tailgaters weren't the only ones I was thinking of. They're just the less noticeable peril out there. There are also the cars that are driving along behind me at a steady pace, but suddenly accelerate the moment I start signalling for a lane change.
Oh gawd, there is something wrong with those people. I had one guy who was probably 3000 feet away, going 45 in a 45. I pulled onto the highway, and was up to the speed limit in a few seconds. He floored it, came up and tailgated me, then passed me flipped me off and tried the old brake slam trick. I suspect he was having a bad day or something. He had no idea of the danger he was in.
There are the people who negotiate lane mergings and on-ramps by driving all the way out to the end of their lane, then ac
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troll parking lots.
Parking lots are private property. So there would be nothing stopping me from using a plate flipper [licenseplateflipper.com].
Re: Not just police (Score:2)
Well that depends on jurisdiction I'd say.
Here around all publicly accessible private space are covered by traffic law. Only your private yard that is open only to you is not covered.
(That regulation seems to be a couple of decades old, on old properties you can see signs telling that traffic law applies on this parking lot, but these signs are clearly dying out.)
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Since you used or, thereby evaluating the "sham project" and "poor code reader" possibilities as mutually exclusive when they are not, I'm going to go with both for the win! ;-)
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ACLU preemptively nipped this one in the bud. No LPR devices for cops in Maine. Portland was going to get some. We said no.