See the Surveillance State at Work in Your Own Community
The Atlas of Surveillance lets us monitor the agencies that snoop on the public.

In the race among U.S. law enforcement agencies to be the snoopiest, most intrusive, and greatest threat to privacy, it's really hard to score the players. To a great extent, that's because the eavesdroppers and keyhole-peepers are more enthusiastic about monitoring us than they are about letting us know that they're watching. Fortunately, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is there to keep an eye on things and to let us know who is the nosiest of them all.
"This week, EFF's Atlas of Surveillance project hit a bittersweet milestone," EFF's Dave Maass, director of investigations, noted Nov. 17. "The Atlas of Surveillance has now hit 10,000 data points. It contains at least partial data on approximately 5,500 law enforcement agencies in all 50 states, as well as most territories and districts."
While incomplete, as is unavoidable in any effort to track government bodies that resent being subject to the sort of scrutiny they inflict on others, the Atlas of Surveillance is a fascinating source of information (we previously covered it in 2020, when it included only 3,000 agencies). It's of clear value to journalists, civil liberties advocates, and anybody concerned about going about their business with a modicum of privacy. The Atlas is searchable, mappable, and allows you to select or deselect specific types of surveillance such as license-plate readers, doorbell-camera networks, and facial recognition. That's handy for determining the pervasiveness of the surveillance state where you live, and for planning journeys—although good luck picking entirely anonymous routes.
I searched for Cottonwood, Ariz., the nearest town to my home. Like many law-enforcement agencies, the Cottonwood Police Department uses body-worn cameras to minimize disputes over what happens in interactions between police and the public. The nearby Yavapai-Apache Nation Tribal Police Department also uses body-worn cameras, as do many Arizona law-enforcement agencies.
The Atlas also reveals that the Cottonwood Police Department has a partnership with Ring, the Amazon-owned home-security company, that allows police access to doorbell-camera footage from customers. Participation was originally sold as voluntary, but we now know that Ring makes recordings available on police request without a warrant.
It's a relatively easy way to build a surveillance state, installed and paid for by those being scrutinized.
Out of curiosity, I also pulled up a map of the road trip my son and I recently took to visit the campus of Kansas State University. I like driving to see the sights but, even with no highway equivalent of the TSA (yet), it's increasingly difficult to escape scrutiny on these journeys. According to the Atlas of Surveillance, we passed through jurisdictions that, in addition to bodycams and doorbell cameras, register private surveillance cameras for official use, monitor the public with drones, detect gunshots, use facial recognition, track cellphones, and automatically check passing license plates against databases.
On Interstate 40, the village of Milan, N.M., "partnered with a tech startup, Flock Safety, to install two license plate reading cameras around the village," according to KRQE. "One near the interstate and the other near Milan Elementary School. The cameras scan a vehicle's license plate and can send a real-time alert to police when a car comes up stolen or if the driver is a fugitive."
By that point we'd already passed through the drones and automatic license plate readers of the Navajo County Sheriff's Department, in Arizona.
Unsurprisingly, interstates are the most highly scrutinized roads, with greater—though not complete—privacy afforded on smaller, less-trafficked roads. The leg of our journey in Kansas probably went largely unmonitored, especially since we used cash for gas and meals.
Around town, government surveillance cameras, home doorbell cameras, and other private cameras accessible by police are the greatest concern. Some jurisdictions have restricted police use of certain surveillance technology, such as facial recognition. But San Francisco is one of those jurisdictions, and it recently eased the way for increased police access to private surveillance cameras in real-time. A policy lasts right up until it's reversed.
Likewise, Ring currently doesn't include facial recognition in its offerings and the company swears it "will neither sell nor offer facial recognition technology to law enforcement." But the company also holds patents on the technology and several competitors offer facial recognition, though they're not so closely associated with police departments.
Few of these surveillance systems are networked together at present, though the Ring network comes the closest because it's based around one company. License-plate cameras and facial-recognition software are also often tied into private databases that serve multiple jurisdictions. Last year, BuzzFeed news put together a list of 1,803 government agencies that used or had tried facial recognition tools from market-leading Clearview AI. The dominant license-plate reader company is now Motorola, since it acquired the parent company of Vigilant Solutions in 2019.
Frankly, it's difficult to see the future as anything other than more closely surveilled, and in a more coordinated way. Law enforcement agencies are likely to coordinate their efforts through multi-jurisdictional efforts such as the U.S. Department of Justice's Regional Information Sharing Systems which increase reach while reducing costs and technical challenges. They can also sign up as subscribers to one or more privately developed plug-and-play surveillance networks.
Those of us who are especially surveillance-averse will still take active measures to obscure our trail, through purchases made in cash, face masks, clothing that confuses algorithms, and leaving our cellphones at home. But we will still be watched, and chances are that making efforts to preserve anonymity will itself come to be seen by the powers that be as suspicious.
So, privacy may be dead, at least in public spaces. That means it's that much more important to make use of tools like the Atlas of Surveillance to publicize who is watching and what they are doing with the information. That will be an important step towards pulling the teeth of the snoopy agencies and limiting the scope of the laws they enforce so that we're not at constant risk from unsleeping eyes. We might not be able to completely preserve our anonymity, but we should make every attempt to reduce the danger those monitoring us can pose with the information they gather.
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“Like many law-enforcement agencies, the Cottonwood Police Department uses body-worn cameras to minimize disputes over what happens in interactions between police and the public.”
The references to body-worn cameras in this article are bizarre. In any other context, this libertarian magazine is tripping over itself to explain how body-cams are such an important tool for police accountability.
But throughout this article, body-cameras are not seen as a tool that police-accountability activists have repeatedly championed. No, body-cameras are tools the police use to “minimize disputes”, and they are conflated repeatedly with creepy surveillance technology like Ring Doorbell dragnets and Automated License Readers. Indeed, in a search of my county, out of 75 records, 13 (17%) were the GOOD NEWS that police are wearing body cameras.
The sad thing is that body-cam footage aside, there is a lot to be concerned about in the Atlas database. It was actually quite surprising that pretty much every town in my county- whether a full city or bedroom community- makes ubiquitous use of automated license plate readers, facial recognition, and has signed a data sharing deal with amazon for Ring footage. This sort of data is important to have.
The problem is that if even good data is going to be used against the police, what is their incentive to cooperate with activists and reformers? There will be many in their ranks that (legitimately) complain that cooperating with reformers is a thankless activity that will just be used against them in the future. Regardless of what you feel about the cops, I think anyone would want police to be more responsive to their community. That is less likely to happen if “Advocates” like Reason never give them credit for responding positively, and in fact cast shade on them for doing exactly what Reason has called for in the past.
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Body-cams are a mixed blessing, not an irrefutable good. Yes, they aid in holding bad cops accountable. But the very always-on function that makes them effective also makes them vulnerable to abuse. What rights will we lose (or maybe have we already lost) when someone hooks up a faceprint reader to the body-cam archive?
Yes, I'd rather have cops wearing body-cams than not. But that shouldn't stop us from worrying about the adverse side-effects of even a generally positive idea.
"But that shouldn’t stop us from worrying about the adverse side-effects of even a generally positive idea."
But that fact should not stop us from acknowledging that those body cams exist SOLELY due to the accountability advocates- like 2Chili- who now say they are merely useful to "minimize disputes".
Again, I don't disagree that they can be abused. What I disagree with is this "damned if you do, damned if you don't" antagonism. The police are wearing those cameras only because people like 2Chili demanded it. And now they are concerned about privacy, without even a passing mention of their role in creating that situation.
At least we have the answwr to who surveils the surveillors.
Body cameras are used when the situation is favorable. Until it can't be "turned off" or "forgotten to be activated" it is not a reliable indicator of what happened.
While cops rarely face consequences for breaking the law, failing to follow department policy is a big deal. And some departments really do enforce their policies on officers using their cameras. Sure the cop won't be charged for killing someone, but at least they'll be fired for violating department policy.
Can't remember the name of the movie, it was pretty terrible anyway, but at one point when dude and his buddy are leaving the house to kill someone his wife yells "You're forgetting your cell phone!" and he yells back "No I'm not!"
"but we should make every attempt to reduce the danger those monitoring us can pose with the information they gather."
A tall order. I suggest when Facebook, Google, Twitter etc use or sell information they've data-mined from 'users,' the users should be compensated, through a system of micro payments. This might lessen the intensity of their monitoring activities, as well as benefit those who are providing valuable information to the surveillers.
Not listed in the data base, but several years ago Binghamton, NY installed plate readers at every entrance & exit to the city, there is a record of every vehicle that enters or leaves the city limits.
At about the same time the Broome County Sheriff installed plate readers on the road leading to the jail in order to have a record of every vehicle carrying someone to visit a prisoner.
"and leaving our cellphones at home."
I'd be surprised if the police wouldn't rather have the same ability to track guns in a similar way. If guns were equipped with a tracking device, they could be monitored. Perhaps they could also be rendered inoperable when the gun carrier enters a school or a gay nightclub, for example.
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This is a very complex issue with many twists and turns, not the simple "surveillance state" narrative reflected in this article. At the center of all discussions should be the question of what is "public" and why. Part of the problem here is that cities, counties and states "own" almost all public areas - streets, sidewalks, parks, traffic signal intersections and so on - and it is almost impossible for anyone to leave her own home property without traveling through several government jurisdictions. Cutting to the chase, the real question is not whether surveillance images will be collected by government agencies. The real question is how to prevent officials from abusing the information. In simpler times agents were required to present evidence that a crime had been (or was about to be) committed and probable cause to "search" a limited location for evidence needed to arrest, charge and eventually convict the suspect. We have all seen how likely those protections are to be corrupted and abused by officials. In the modern era attempts have been made to extend protections (such as they are) to wiretaps and electronic communications and banking transactions. But we should try to keep in mind that the goal is not to prevent data collection but to prevent it from being abused by government officials.
Well, the thing is, government officials will abuse the data/information. That is the nature of the beast. The goal should be to prevent the data collection. You said it yourself - there needs to be probable cause. And most importantly, on an individual level. None of that collectivist society garbage.
"But we should try to keep in mind that the goal is not to prevent data collection but to prevent it from being abused by government officials."
The goal implicit in any technology is to maximize its potential and squeeze the most utility from it. With improved hardware, memory, and algorithms, total surveillance of everyone all the time is all but inevitable. If not by government, then private concerns seeking to make a profit.
Surprised that my NJ town only shows up for body cameras. Of course out on the outskirts where I am, you don't find many Ring cameras.
>> my son and I recently took to visit the campus of Kansas State University
go Cats. hope you stopped @Auntie Mae's
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This is a really interesting story about how can surveillance state at work in your own community and I don't think so we have many benefits from this.
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Considering the suggestion of "leaving the cellphone at home": there may be several alternatives to consider. Though powering down the phone is not a guarantee that the phone is not communicating with a cell tower, removing the battery, though a pain, will terminate communication. Another way to accomplish this is to place the phone in a special pouch that prohibits radio waves from entering or leaving the pouch. Such a pouch is known in physics as a "faraday cage"; this technique can also be used to protect any electronic device from EMPs (produced by nuclear weapons and solar flares). Such pouches, sized for cell phones or whatever else, are available on Amazon and elsewhere. Simply removing the phone from the pouch brings it back into service; much easier than rebooting the phone or removing/replacing the battery. Also note that carefully wrapping a device in aluminum foil can accomplish the same thing.
On another note: foil is also a cheap way to protect backed up data on jump drives from an EMP. Though this idea may be overkill, solar flares that are powerful enough to do this, though rare, do occur. Look up "The 1859 Carrington Event".
"removing the battery, though a pain, will terminate communication."
Such phones have two batteries, don't they? I remember Snowden telling us that both have to be removed if you want to thwart efforts to track you.
"Another way to accomplish this is to place the phone in a special pouch that prohibits radio waves from entering or leaving the pouch."
Just make sure the pouch you buy isn't itself fitted with RFID or something to make it trackable.
If you're planning to do bad things, leaving it at home is the best bet. Turning it off will actually draw attention to yourself.
“Also note that carefully wrapping a device in aluminum foil can accomplish the same thing.”
No thanks! Last time I tried that my phone browser was redirecting me to conspiracy theory sites for the better part of a week!
And when the criminals get a hold of this surveillance power?
Being a member of government doesn't auto-assure honorable intentions especially when the governments biggest agenda right now is to follow in the footsteps of Hitler (National Socialism).
And if government was honorable (and not criminal) it would inherently recognize individual privacy and violations of it.
This is literally the tip of the iceberg! Not disparaging the well-meaning officials being misled by their agency’s top management.
If you triangulate the government’s own records, it appears they uploaded “suspicious persons” as far back as the 1980’s (or earlier). Those 1980 era “suspicious persons” (lower designation than “suspect”) were uploaded onto 9/11 blacklists.
Suspicious persons from 20 years earlier than 9/11 were blacklisted, exploiting 9/11 – that’s fraud pure and simple.
Apparently state “Fusion Centers” got more federal “Preemption & Prevention grants” money by having more people on their blacklists. So they simply uploaded “suspicious persons” from the 1980’s or earlier.
In real practice, that likely means that the children of local police officers that you attended high school with, might have blacklisted their classmates in the 1980’s with the local police (maybe investigating an unpopular family or guilt-by-association). The local police then uploaded those 1980’s blacklists onto 9/11 blacklists. These were likely fraudulent blacklists in the 1980’s, with no charge or arrest for the 20 years leading up to 9/11. The result innocent Americans received blacklisting-torture for over 20 years based on this fraudulent watch-listing system.
Although likely not as severe as most war crimes internationally, the USA may have accrued the largest number of war crimes over 20+ years of blacklisting torture. That doesn’t account for the blacklisting of the previous 20 years until they exploited 9/11.
Innocent Americans citizens being harassed by federal, state and local police exceeding 7000 consecutive days of abuses is indeed torture – akin to Chinese Water Torture.
Example: maybe a jury would consider 7 days of police/DHS harassment is not torture, but exceeding 7000 consecutive days of police/DHS harassment is absolutely torture.
Having said this, it’s mostly well-meaning officials working in a very evil “system” of bureaucracy. This is likely what you are viewing with this surveillance tool.
Note: this is not from a government employee or contractor (not a whistleblower leak), this is from a victim of this evil practice.
Why should anyone object to the police having access to doorbell footage? It necessarily points out, away from the home. TBH, I have the same feeling about any public surveillance camera. If it's showing what's out in public, nobody has any reasonable expectation of privacy. And it has the potential to identify and clear suspects in crimes.
Exactly.
If you're not doing anything wrong, what are you worried about, right?
Like those "wrong" witches of the Salem-witch hunts?
99% of the time "wrong" is personal-prejudices. 50% of the time "wrong" is motivated by the self-interest of the prosecution. To pretend everyone doesn't need to worry about being "wrong" in the eyes of the public is a lost case from it's very introduction and a means to an ends for lock-step conformance to the most popular gang.
Freedom isn't about coerced lock-step conformance. If a serious crime is committed the US Constitution grants !warranted! search and seizure.
I love poe's law.
If there's nothing illegal going on in your wife's panties, then you don't mind if I feel around a little in them to see for myself, do you? What are you trying to hide?
Responding to Larryseltzer:
Arguably America’s greatest lawman in all of American history – Robert Jackson – believed “warrantless search and seizure” (violating the 4th Amendment) to be the foundation of tyranny.
A judicial search warrant, approved by a judge, would justify police obtaining that camera footage. If real probable cause exists, of a past crime, then obtaining a warrant is not a problem on any legitimate case. Most owners would comply voluntarily if it were a legitimate case.
Jackson regretted the rounding up of American citizens during World War Two. American citizens were removed from their homes – at gunpoint – then sent to detention camps for up to 4 years. Most lost their homes, businesses and savings.
After World War Two, Jackson was Chief Prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials, prosecuting Nazis after the war. The Nazis primarily used “arbitrary search and seizure” (warrantless searches) to round up innocent Jewish citizens that were then abused and murdered.
Think Americans have learned? The federal government in 2022 is still blacklisting innocent Americans from fraudulent “search and seizure” after 9/11. The U.S. government destroyed likely hundreds of thousands of innocent Americans without judicial search and seizure warrants. The ACLU reports over 1 million persons on various 9/11 blacklists with a terrorism-conviction rate of less than 1/10 of 1%. Any legitimate 4th Amendment search should net at least a 70% terrorism-conviction rate or 700,000 terrorism-convictions. In 2022, there is no way to be removed from these fraudulent blacklists!
Even though we have good well-meaning police and officials, never forget about the “mission-creep” that follows every program. Since we have virtually defeated Islamic terrorists, will the bureaucracy focus on Trump’s extreme rightwing terrorists?
What will those thousands of homeland security investigators and interrogators now focus on? Will they use foreign authorities on domestic citizens? Their Oath of Office prohibits them from violating rights inside the United States or American citizens overseas.
The telescreen received and transmitted simultaneously. Any sound that Winston made, above the level of a very low whisper, would be picked up by it. So long as he remained within the field of vision, which the metal plaque commanded, he could be seen as well as heard.
....There was, of course, no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment.
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