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Government Privacy Transportation United States

The US Government Is Using Road Signs Showing Drivers How Fast They're Going To Capture License Plate Data (qz.com) 218

Zorro shares a report from Quartz: According to recently released U.S. federal contracting data, the Drug Enforcement Administration will be expanding the footprint of its nationwide surveillance network with the purchase of "multiple" trailer-mounted speed displays "to be retrofitted as mobile LPR [License Plate Reader] platforms." The DEA is buying them from RU2 Systems Inc., a private Mesa, Arizona company. How much it's spending on the signs has been redacted. Two other, apparently related contracts, show that the DEA has hired a small machine shop in California, and another in Virginia, to conceal the readers within the signs. An RU2 representative said the company providing the LPR devices themselves is a Canadian firm called Genetec.
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The US Government Is Using Road Signs Showing Drivers How Fast They're Going To Capture License Plate Data

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  • by jbmartin6 ( 1232050 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:09AM (#57410034)
    They are also collecting photos of me making an obscene gesture at every one of these signs I pass.
    • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:16AM (#57410094)

      They are also collecting photos of me making an obscene gesture at every one of these signs I pass.

      Around here most people try and get the high score when passing one of those electronic speed signs.

      • Where I grew up the common story was to remove your license plate and pants, then rip by speeding cameras on your motorcycle.

        I can only assume the police found it amusing to get pictures of the great white streak. Not sure if tickets were ever actually given.

      • by Agripa ( 139780 )

        Around here most people try and get the high score when passing one of those electronic speed signs.

        How are the shots counted? By caliber? Closest to the center? Tightest group?

    • Out west (Score:5, Interesting)

      by AntronArgaiv ( 4043705 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:21AM (#57410138)

      I suspect they will have issues with bullet holes in the cameras in the western states.

      • I suspect they will have issues with bullet holes in the cameras in the western states.

        I remember in college a friend of mine and I used to like going on road trips just randomly taking back roads anywhere. One night we ended up all the way over in Alabama (from SC) taking only back roads all the way there. We had a huge laugh at the "Welcome to Alabama" sign- it was right out of a stereotype- riddled with bullet holes.

      • by macraig ( 621737 )

        If them cowboys is smart, they'll be cowards and shoot 'em in tha backside.

    • I once flipped-off a BING mapping car.
  • by sheramil ( 921315 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:10AM (#57410044)

    How the hell is it the DEA's responsibility to monitor driving speeds? If someone's driving 2 miles per hour over the posted limit do they take this as evidence the driver is hopped up on methamphetamines and they have the right to pull them over? Or if they're driving 3 miles per hour UNDER the posted limit, they claim the driver is stoned and shoot the tires out?

    • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:13AM (#57410064)

      The point of these things is not to measure speed, itâ(TM)s to disguise tracking cameras as something else you normally encounter on a road and do not think of recording anything. They are trying to get a sense of where people are using cars that may be evading known traffic cameras.

      • by garcia ( 6573 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:23AM (#57410150)

        My problem with these isn't even the 'being tracked' issue, it's that the Government (state or federal) was not meant to be a revenue generation machine. Unfortunately, governments use these tools not for safety, as they claim--especially in the instances of speed/red light/LPRs, but for revenue generation. They send automated civil fines for speed/light violations (potentially taken entirely out of context with no recourse) or to fine owners for any number of violations related to license plates.

        We have to decide what levels we're willing to accept as intrusion. Papers please are not acceptable to me nor are these civil, out of context, fines. YMMV.

        • My problem with these isn't even the 'being tracked' issue, it's that the Government (state or federal) was not meant to be a revenue generation machine.

          All modern governments are built on machines that generate revenue.. That is the only alternative to a forced draft of materials and labor. A strong federal government with independent sources of revenue was forged in the US because a loose confederation of states couldn't or wouldn't contribute enough money to keep the country afloat or do anything worthwhile like building a national system of roads and canals.

        • I've been driving for 18 years, and my only ticket was properly issued by a human. Are law abiding citizens actually getting these automated fines with any frequency? It would be nice to see evidence that there's an actual serious problem before discussing what to do about it.

          • Yes.

            http://www.orangecountyfl.net/... [orangecountyfl.net]

            This is the light nearest me ticketed 2200 individuals (reducing average light-running by 200), while increasing the crash rate by 30%.

            The average ticketer machine issued 1300 tickets, at $158 each, generating $205K per machine. 10 machines were installed in the first phase, generating $2M in additional revenue (ostensibly from lawbreakers).

            Note, however, that the cameras, on the whole, decreased instances of crashes *and* instances of light-running while generating thi

        • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

          That's true, the fines should be proportional to income in order to make them a true deterrent against reckless driving by wealthy people.

        • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )

          My problem with these isn't even the 'being tracked' issue, it's that the Government (state or federal) was not meant to be a revenue generation machine. Unfortunately, governments use these tools not for safety, as they claim--especially in the instances of speed/red light/LPRs, but for revenue generation. They send automated civil fines for speed/light violations (potentially taken entirely out of context with no recourse)

          I agree they're not supposed to be revenue generation machines. However, I disagree on the red light cameras. They most certainly are a safety issue, and a way to confirm the lights meet the specifications for the speed limits on the road. Note that most states have a timing requirement on lights, and usually that includes the ability of an 80 ton truck to safely stop once the light changes. So by no means should a red light camera ever catch a car running a red light other than when someone does it intenti

          • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

            I'm too lazy to look it up, but here in VA, red light cameras were shutdown. There was no standard for setting the duration of yellow lights, and I've seen the same in many other states. I'm not a fan of autonomous enforcement, but we do need to do something about the frequency of folks running them. However, to be fair, standardization should be required.

        • Or you could try not speeding.

          • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

            Or you could try not speeding.

            Sorry, life's too short for me to pay attention to arbitrarily choses rules. I speed every day, and the time I save doing so is well worth whatever tickets I've received over the ~45 years of driving.

            Now, if you'd like to debate the safety aspect, I'd be happy to. I only speed up to what I consider safe for conditions (weather, traffic, the vehicle's capabilities, etc.). I don't endanger others by tailgating, or weaving. I use my signals. And I'm experienced at high speed driving, including track and a

      • they are put in places folks are speeding or where they have been accidents. The data shows folks slow down when they know how fast they're driving, but it's easy to ignore your gauge and just go with the flow, which usually puts you 10-15 over.
        • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @05:53PM (#57413900)

          >"they are put in places folks are speeding or where they have been accidents. The data shows folks slow down when they know how fast they're driving, but it's easy to ignore your gauge and just go with the flow, which usually puts you 10-15 over."

          Going with the flow is exactly what DOES NOT cause accidents. Accidents are caused primarily by:

          1) Distracted driving
          2) Impaired driving
          3) Following too closely
          4) Improper lane changes
          5) Gross speed *differential*

          And none of those have an "automated" "ticket in the mail" solution. Yet the obsession always seems to be over speed. Why? Because it is objective, easily obtained, and generates lots of revenue.

    • roads are under posted just try to do the limit of 55 on I-294 when it's wide open.

      • roads are under posted just try to do the limit of 55 on I-294 when it's wide open.

        In most areas if you post a speed limit as 45 everyone will do 55. If you post a speed limit of 55 everyone will do 65.

        In some areas it's more than that. I'm not familiar with I-294 - but if it's like the I-285 around Atlanta which has similar speed limits- it's a bit of a joke and the speed people travel is way higher than the limit. Many going above 80. Realistically the police probably could raise the speed limit- it's not like they even try and enforce the speed limit anyway- no one gets pulled over

        • by Anonymous Coward

          And that's the logic that keeps them from raising the speed limit on a highway near me from the current 55 to 65 like all of the similar highways in the area. As it stands, almost nobody, outside of extreme traffic conditions, goes less than 65. Traffic on the highways with higher speed limits have similar, if not lower, typical speeds; traffic moves at roughly the same speed around here regardless of whether the limit is 55, 65, or 75. You could raise the speed limit to 80 and it wouldn't change things at

          • also the makes the work zones at 45 will all kinds of walls a big joke as well. Now if there hard real limits and did not have as many 24/7 45 work zones then more people would slow down in them.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:52AM (#57410292)

      How the hell is it the DEA's responsibility to monitor driving speeds?

      Mission creep, plain and simple.

      The DEA, ICE, and everyone else are just continually ramping up surveillance on everything and deciding they need to monitor everybody just in case.

      See, the DEA doesn't care about how fast your going, they're just piggy-backing the plate readers on the things which tell you how fast you're going ... this way they can monitor everybody. In this way, they can know where everybody goes in case they need to charge you with something later.

      There will always be that idiotic segment of society who just think "well, they're doing this to keep me safe, so it's awesome". The problem is those people are incapable of realizing how much their own rights are being eroded in the name of Keeping You Safe From Bad People. The classic "you have nothing to fear if you have nothing to hide" line of fascists and tyrants, accepted by idiots who haven't through it through.

      Land of the free? Home of the brave? Not so much. Americans have been conditioned since 9/11 to just blindly accept this shit.

      Thirty years ago this would have caused outrage in America, now everyone just goes back to the Kardashians and hopes the government is going to keep them safe.

      At the end of the day, this is just the continuous surveillance state ratcheting up, ensuring they monitor everybody at all times -- and the ad and analytic companies can be secretly tapped to fill in the blanks about every aspect of your life. The dystopian state marches on.

      Papers please, comrade ... the State is watching you.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The road side equipment collecting driver face, passenger face, cell phone and a front /back license plate reader along main US roads will get noticed.
      A chat down citizenship question to get induce voice print? Cell phone collection?
      People upload video clips about the amount of innovative and new gov/law enforcement digital collection they see on the side of their main roads.
      Put some of that collect it all equipment in more normal looking trailer-mounted speed displays and fewer questions are asked.
    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      It's like a gateway drug. If you're a speeder, you're also probably a junkie.

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      How the hell is it the DEA's responsibility to monitor driving speeds?

      If they are going faster than the speed limit, then that is probable cause to stop and search the vehicle for drugs. If they are going slower than the speed limit, then that is probable cause to stop and search the vehicle for drugs. If they are going at the speed limit, then that is probable cause to stop and search the vehicle for drugs.

  • Only drive off road (Score:3, Informative)

    by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:10AM (#57410046)
    I'm giving up on roads. From now own, I will drive everywhere cross country. It will annoy my neighbors, but what the heck, I do that now.
  • by pr0t0 ( 216378 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:13AM (#57410062)

    Now flies "o'er the land of the surveilled, and the home of the afraid."

  • by superwiz ( 655733 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:15AM (#57410084) Journal
    Government also has people in cars with guns who can stop you and arrest on those roads, you know. You already have to REGISTER your car to drive it on a "public" (i.e. government) road. That means the government keeps track of what cars you own and such. Why should operating heavy machinery on a piece of land made by the government not come with no expectation of privacy? You wouldn't expect that you could operate a train and stay private about it. Just because cars are more versatile, doesn't mean the same principle doesn't apply. The only reason people care is that tracking cars used to be outside of the realm of what was possible. But the expectation of privacy that came with the fact no one cared to look was not the same a guaranteed privacy.
    • I do not care about privacy. I can make my Google Maps history public right now.

      What I care is when this information will be used to rob me by local government in the form of bullshit road fines.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Nothing some duct tape and a stroll at night time wouldnt fix. Eventually theyll assign a police officer to guard them, maxing the whole endevour expensive. Make it expensive enough and theyll stop

  • and on a toll way they get each Plate in all lanes at the tolling points.

  • Vandalize them (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mapkinase ( 958129 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:26AM (#57410170) Homepage Journal

    That's all. We should start a national campaign of vandalizing this bullshit good-driver tax.

    It's very well known that all the speed controlling devices are located in the areas where people are most likely to speed and people are most likely to speed in the areas where it is the SAFEST to speed.

    The parkway with a healthy forest devider three lane on each side that has typically 50 mph limit in California is getting a 35 mph speed trap for no reason but to rob the drivers.

    Vandalize them. Destroy them. A la guerre comme a la guerre.

    • Those "speed traps" you don't understand are frequently for the sake of pedestrians, bicyclists and residents and businesses within earshot. They have rights too.

      • If safety were the foremost concern, they wouldn't suddenly go from a 50 MPH to 35 MPH speed limit with no warning. They'd do it like my city does - a warning sign with flashing lights that there's a 35 MPH zone coming up about a half mile before the speed limit change, then the 35 MPH speed limit. (I think they did it this way because it's on a downhill grade, so people tended not to slow down quickly enough.)

        What's needed is to eliminate money from the equation. Speeding tickets and other fines, as
      • >Those "speed traps" you don't understand

        No. YOU do not understand, dimwit. You are talking out of your fat ass.

    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      It's very well known that all the speed controlling devices are located in the areas where people are most likely to speed and people are most likely to speed in the areas where it is the SAFEST to speed.

      No, it is not "very well known" - I only see these on back/side road, typically residential or high-pedestrian traffic areas. When I see them on highways it is just before a construction site with reduced speed limits. NONE of those areas are "SAFEST to speed".

      The parkway with a healthy forest devider three lane on each side that has typically 50 mph limit in California is getting a 35 mph speed trap for no reason but to rob the drivers.

      California is a special case, unlike many of the other 49 states, don't assume that what you observe in California is wide-spread, or even common, outside California. That said, I've never seen a three lane road with a speed limit of 35 that wasn't su

    • by dknj ( 441802 )

      I would just suggest noncompliance and passive resistance. For instance, it's illegal in almost every state to cover your license plate. Most states do NOT make it illegal to have letters and numbers on the trunk lid around the license plate. If you happen to go off roading, you may get a line or two, or some spots of mud on your license plate.

      What I'm trying to say, is that we have solved the captcha spam problem a long time ago. Let's apply it to real world problems now.

      -dk

    • I would assume I would be on camera as I approached it, even if I sneaked up behind it.

      If vandalism did become widespread they would definitely try to catch the culprits and unless it became widespread a vandalism campaign against them would merely be a thorn in their side.

      In fact it's probably a good idea to assume you're on camera in public unless you're in the wilderness somewhere.

      I'll accept the occasional speeding ticket rather than be charged with an actual crime. Would it be destruction of governmen

      • >I would assume I would be on camera as I approached it, even if I sneaked up behind it.

        Shield and sword never ends, Not a reason to give up.

        It's a robbery, plain and simple.

  • by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 ) on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:28AM (#57410180) Journal
    Not sure about other states, but Michigan doesn't require a front license plate. They must be mounting these on the rear and recording after you have gone by.
    • Not sure about other states, but Michigan doesn't require a front license plate. They must be mounting these on the rear and recording after you have gone by.

      Most Southern states don't require a front license plate either.

  • Than current equally portable small mounted photocameras, sometimes well hidden besides other large roadside objects.

  • Redacted? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @09:38AM (#57410222)

    How much it's spending on the signs has been redacted.

    That right there. That disgusts me. How dare a government hide such information from the voting public that's paying for it all.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by BlueStrat ( 756137 )

      How much it's spending on the signs has been redacted.

      That right there. That disgusts me. How dare a government hide such information from the voting public that's paying for it all.

      "Sit down and shut up, Prole, or we'll civil-forfeit everything you own and parallel-construct your ass into a life sentence in PMITA prison!" -- Government

      Ain't freedom grand?

      Hey everyone, let's allow the government an even wider scope and give it more power over more of our lives and give it more of our money to do it with! What could possibly go wrong? /s

      Strat

      Strat

    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      Perhaps they are only buying a few, but they want drug dealers to think they are everywhere?

      You have to wonder about a public bid for "secret, hidden" license plate readers, right?

  • Not only was the defendant going 15 MPH over the speed limit, but he was also posting messages to facebook during this time. Based on his GPS data, we have concluded that he alsolied to officers about where he had been and where he was going. So we are recommending in addition to the traffic violation a charge of reckless endangerment and providing false information to officers.

  • Isn't it kinda stupid to to publicly post that you are "hiding" license plate readers for the DEA in speed-measuring signs?

    Were I a person involved in something the DEA might be interested in, I'd make a point of avoiding such signs.

    It's like a policeman at a speed trap, waiting behind a billboard, but the billboard says "Warning: There's a speed radar-equipped patrol car behind this billboard!"

  • by kenh ( 9056 )

    To operate on the public roadways, your vehicle needs a license plate.

    By law your license plate must be readable and not obscured.

    Anyone on the side of the road, or in a vehicle behind/in front of you can read the license plate.

    There is no presumption of privacy as you drive around on the public roads with a sign that has a tag on it that ties that car to an individual. It's as if you are driving around with your name on the side of the vehicle, and choosing to get upset that people on the side of the road

    • >"There is no presumption of privacy as you drive around on the public roads with a sign that has a tag on it that ties that car to an individual. It's as if you are driving around with your name on the side of the vehicle, and choosing to get upset that people on the side of the road know you are there."

      I hear this kind of nonsense all the time. Yes, there IS a presumption based on just reason, if nothing else. Nobody 60 years ago would really have envisioned technology that could spy on people so eas

  • We need naked under 18 year olds to dance around in front of the cameras, then we can tip off the feds that the company is collecting and storing child pornography.

  • Yeah. The first people who get fucked like this will be stopping at these signs and demolishing them.

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