San Francisco Police Can Now Have Live Access to Nearly Any Camera in the City
A new ordinance passed by the city's Board of Supervisors allows police to request live access to private security cameras even for misdemeanor violations.

Law enforcement access to certain private data, like surveillance camera footage, typically requires a warrant. But increasingly, police are finding ways around that requirement. For owners of Amazon's popular Ring video doorbells, police can submit an "emergency request" to get access to a customer's stored footage without the customer's permission. Now, in San Francisco, police can get live access to private security cameras, even if no crime has been committed.
Last week, the city's Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance regulating San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) access to private security cameras, including those put up by homeowners on their own property. The new policy establishes a 15-month pilot program, which would allow the SFPD to "temporarily live monitor activity during exigent circumstances, significant events with public safety concerns, and investigations relating to active misdemeanor and felony violations" as well as "gather and review historical video footage for the purposes of conducting a criminal investigation."
Nominally, the proposal is supposed to help ameliorate police staffing issues: By the end of the year, SFPD expects to be more than 800 officers short, which constitutes more than a third of a fully staffed police force. But Supervisor Dean Preston disagreed, stating that the Board of Supervisors "handed $50 million extra in increases to the police department this year, with no real showing of need, because they were so supposedly understaffed." Now, he says, not only does the SFPD need the extra $50 million, "but they have to have dramatically expanded surveillance rights because they're theoretically understaffed. That really doesn't resonate with me."
Privacy advocates opposed the measure as well. Jennifer Jones, an attorney with the Northern California chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), told ABC 7 News that California misdemeanors include "posting an ad on city and county property without authorization, [or] disturbing a religious [service] with rude or indecent behavior." SFPD could theoretically seek live access to private security camera feeds in either case. As Matthew Guariglia, a policy analyst at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), wrote, "misdemeanors like vandalism or jaywalking happen on nearly every street of San Francisco on any given day."
Previously, under a 2019 ordinance, officers were only permitted access to live camera footage without a warrant under "exigent circumstances," which it defined as "an emergency involving imminent danger of death or serious physical injury." In December, Mayor London Breed complained that this minor stipulation "hobbled law enforcement when confronting life-threatening incidents like active shooters, suspected terrorist events, hostage taking, kidnapping, natural disasters, or looting." Breed does not detail any such cases of terror, hostage, or kidnapping events since the 2019 ordinance was passed, and there is notably a major difference between those situations and looting. She further wrote that the ordinance should be modified "to clarify that peace officers are allowed to access live-feed and in[-]real-time surveillance technologies when necessary to maintain public safety." District Attorney Brooke Jenkins indicated her office supported the measure, saying it could "help address the existence of open-air drug markets fueling the sale of the deadly drug fentanyl."
Breed and a city supervisor submitted similar proposals before ultimately agreeing to the current version after negotiating with the SFPD.
Notably, the final version of the proposal requires the camera owner's "express consent." But once access is granted, SFPD can continue streaming live for up to 24 hours. And there are a worrying number of justifications the department can cite, including "Significant Events" for "placement of police personnel due to crowd sizes."
According to a 2020 lawsuit, SFPD "acquired, borrowed, and used a private network of more than 400 surveillance cameras" to snoop on Black Lives Matter protests. This directly violated the city ordinance passed less than a year earlier, which limited police access only to extremely limited, severe circumstances. Prior to the 2019 policy, SFPD did the same thing in order to surveil Pride parades and Fourth of July celebrations.
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Notably, the final version of the proposal requires the camera owner's "express consent."
"We need consent to see what your camera has recorded. You should probably comply. Wouldn't want a hoard of code inspectors and such to descend upon your home, or be followed and pulled over by vindictive cops for petty shit until you lose all the points on your license. We'd never do anything like that. So fork it over, peasant."
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Compliance that is voluntary is mandatory.
In Russia the Communists vote for you!
I'm the reverse Bernie Sanders.
I drove through Vermont once. It was just hill after hill after hill after hill...
Looks like they could use a good PR firm to extol the advantages of a (police approved) ring type installation to the good citizens in a series of inclusive PSAs that don't appear to denigrate the targeted audience. They could couple the purchase to neighborhood watch subsidies and tax rebates; maybe even a Police Athletic League initiative to help The Most Vulnerable Amongst US™.
Neighborhood watches are racist.
Now San Francisco can track all of their registered
sex offendersRepublicans.They're ok with the sex offenders.
I can't wait until the video leak of Uncle Jesse and Aunt Becky.
Their kids aren't even going to rowing practice. How are they on the crew team?
Finally, San Francisco PD has the tools necessary to bring to justice the villain(s) who are going #2 on the sidewalk!
Are you kidding? Homeless insane drug addicts are a cherished subculture!
Thar's gold in them thar homeless.
Sadly, most Americans would see no problem with this.
San Francisco?
The one in California?
Who cares?
It's not like the serfs have any rights to be violated anyway.
CA, "Constitution; We haven't seen a Constitution in decades..."
[WE] mobs RULE! /s
Constitutions are yet another threat to democracy.
Progressives don't give a shit about the constitutionality of their laws. They know they will be overturned, but when they happens they can just blame the reactionaries. In the mean time they have the power over you.
Is this Ring Cameras only or something ? Or are they saying that the cops can take my closet server where my house cams record data to? I don't trust / believe in Cloud services, so my stuff is local stored before it auto-overwrites after a month.
Or are they saying that the cops can take my closet server where my house cams record data to? I don’t trust / believe in Cloud services, so my stuff is local stored before it auto-overwrites after a month.
With Reason articles, you can't just read the article, sometimes you have to read the linked article to find out that, no Jared Polis didn't just forward the right to a business license to illegal immigrants... but anyhoo, I've only read the article (speed read it) and if we take it at face value, it says "live access". That means your pre-recorded video is not in question here, they want to connect directly to your camera (or nvr) and watch the live footage, regardless of where or how that footage is archived.
I don't even see how this is feasible, technically speaking. I mean, they could identify a camera system, contact the owner, submit a "request" to get live access, then depending on how the system works, the owner would then have to provide them some method of accessing it, which could be entirely different than the system next door... and so on and so on. And in SOME cases, live access may not even be possible, unless you have the cop station someone on your property-- because not everything is internet enabled.
Until all security cameras installed in SF are required to be Internet enabled.
Nope, husband vetoed it. Good choice, it turns out. This is nuts.
If you live in San Francisco, there's another good choice you've yet to make.
I don't want to put where I live on the internet, but it isn't California.
While live feed is on a monitor, there is no external (internet) access to it. The police would have to come inside and tap a line for access; and nope to that. There is virtue in staying lower tech. With every new advance, more of your rights go away due to nosy politicians and authority figures that think they know better than you.
It's not only Ring Cameras but it does require some sort of live connection and prior consent of someone connected to the system. (That someone is not necessarily the owner, however.)
So Amazon can "consent" in your name for all Ring servers. And if you upgrade your house cams from a closet server to anything in the cloud, the cloud provider could do the same.
More importantly, the surveillance requires no proof of wrongdoing on the part of the person being surveilled. The point of a warrant requirement is not merely to prevent the cops from just taking your closet server but also to keep them from using your house cams to spy on your guests and neighbors without first convincing at least one judge that they have a legitimate need. This law widens the "emergency request" exception so much that it swallows the rule.
SCOTUS may eventually determine that this law is constitutional (though I can see several possible avenues to attack that) but it is deeply immoral and unjust.
Your Roomba can report in on any nefarious goings-on inside your house, too. Amazon even has a flying in-house security drone option.
Amazon even has a flying in-house security drone option.
Someone lit the libertarian signal.
Rule #1: Don't make eye contact.
Surveillance; it's not just for China anymore.
Now, in San Francisco, police can get live access to private security cameras, even if no crime has been committed.
How?
I'm guessing it's Third Party Doctrine. Your video is on the cloud which means you never intended it to be private. Like your baby pictures, bank records, and backed up personal information.
See my comment above, they're asking for live feeds, not access to stored or archived footage (although that may be in play as well), but they want to watch the live stream of your camera. This not only seems horrifying from a civil liberties perspective, it seems technologically infeasible.
police can get live access to private security cameras
Again, taking the language at face value, they want access to the camera, not access to the recorded footage. Those are two different things with distinct meaning.
So they want it in real time as it is being uploaded.
Uploaded to what? I work for a multi-billion dollar corporation. We have NVRs in every location. NVRs are neither internet enabled, nor store their video feed in the cloud. If we had a location in SF (which we don't, I'm more than proud to say) then from what I understand of this law, the city of SF could demand live access to the camera feeds, which would mean punching a hole in my firewall, putting it in a DMZ, or giving the city VPN access to our network so they can be logically inside.
Now multiply these access options for tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of cameras and camera systems.
The concept is insane, even if one knew what one were asking for.
I was thinking specifically about doorbell cams. The things individuals own. Not business CCTV.
Well, I mean one of our businesses is surrounded by apartments and homes. It has very visible security cameras on the premises. It seems reasonable to me that... if there were ongoing criminal activity on the street in front of our business that they might demand live access to the cameras which point across the gate and onto the street. That seems far more likely than the cops wanting a live feed to one guy's Ring cam on his Tony Nob Hill home.
Well, one crime (at least) is being committed.
They can also access "historical" footage.
Goddamit, Team Blue. "1984" was cautionary, not instructional.
They’re in for some shitty programming
Batman hardest hit.
Surprising as that may be to people, but your security cameras do not actually need to store their images in the cloud. Many vendors make camera systems that store images and video in your home. You can still choose to back up to the cloud using encrypted backups.
This usurpation is obviously unconstitutional on its face. Encrypt your video, and if anyone demands access to it, tell them to shove a full-grown saguaro where the sun don't shine.
-jcr
this is clearly illegal and unconstitutional. but i'll bet that it will practically mean the police will get access to cloud based camera systems like ring. a great reason to not use cloud based security systems. my property is well covered by many cameras but the system is not run by some cloud based system -- i run and manage my own security camera system.
Hyperventilating about crime do drive a push towards mass incarceration and locking up undesirables once again, leads to police-state like behavior from governments that Libertarians, when the mask/kkk hood isn't slipping, claim to abhor.
Feature, not bug of the fascists plan for America.
1984 in 2022
It's legally impossible to "snoop" on public events. If one acts stupid in public, one faces the consequences. If one is in a public space one has no privacy interest.