Surveillance · Accountability · Civil Liberties

Flock Safety
Cameras &
Your Privacy

Flock Safety's license plate readers are deployed in thousands of communities across the United States. Understanding how this surveillance infrastructure works — and how to protect your rights — has never been more important.

ABC 1234 PLATE READ Timestamp + GPS UPLOADED Cloud storage SHARED Law enforcement
5,000+ Cities Deployed
30 days Data Retention
2,600+ Law Enforcement Partners
License plate readers ◆ Automatic data collection ◆ Third-party sharing ◆ No warrant required ◆ Mass surveillance infrastructure ◆ Community oversight ◆ Civil liberties concerns ◆ Data retention policies ◆ Opt-out rights ◆ FOIA requests ◆ License plate readers ◆ Automatic data collection ◆ Third-party sharing ◆ No warrant required ◆ Mass surveillance infrastructure ◆ Community oversight ◆ Civil liberties concerns ◆ Data retention policies ◆ Opt-out rights ◆ FOIA requests ◆

How Flock Safety
Cameras Operate

Flock Safety installs automated license plate reader (ALPR) cameras that capture and store data on every vehicle that passes — whether or not they are suspected of any crime.

01

Capture & Read

High-resolution cameras photograph passing vehicles and use optical character recognition (OCR) to extract license plate numbers, along with make, model, color, and a timestamp.

02

Upload & Store

Data is immediately uploaded to Flock Safety's cloud servers. Images and metadata are stored for a default retention period — typically 30 days — building a searchable database of vehicle movements.

03

Share & Query

Law enforcement agencies can query the national network across jurisdictions. Flock Safety's "Investigate" feature allows cross-referencing of vehicle sightings across all connected cameras nationwide.

04

Hotlist Alerts

Cameras check plates against "hotlists" of vehicles of interest. When a match occurs, law enforcement receives an alert in real time — including the vehicle's last known location.

05

Third-Party Access

Homeowner associations, private businesses, and other non-law-enforcement entities can also purchase and access Flock camera data with limited regulatory oversight or transparency requirements.

06

No Notification

Residents are generally not informed when their vehicle is read, stored, or queried. There is typically no requirement to notify individuals whose data has been accessed by law enforcement.

Privacy Concerns & Risks

Privacy advocates, legal scholars, and civil liberties organizations have raised significant concerns about the unchecked expansion of Flock Safety's surveillance network. Here are the key issues.



Flock Safety has faced scrutiny from organizations including the ACLU, Electronic Frontier Foundation, and EPIC — the Electronic Privacy Information Center — over its data sharing practices and lack of community oversight mechanisms.

High Risk

Mass Surveillance Without Suspicion

Unlike targeted surveillance requiring probable cause, ALPRs capture data on every passing vehicle — the vast majority belonging to innocent people with no connection to any crime.

Significant

Data Aggregation & Movement Tracking

When combined across hundreds of cameras, retained records build a detailed picture of a person's movements, associations, and routines — a form of surveillance the Supreme Court has raised concerns about.

Significant

Weak Oversight & Access Controls

Many jurisdictions have no formal policies governing who can query the database, for what purposes, or how long records are kept. Internal audits of access are rare and often not public.

High Risk

Cross-Jurisdictional Sharing

Flock's Investigate network allows police in one city to access camera data from another without oversight by the community where the cameras are located — or the community where the subject lives.

Emerging

Chilling Effects on Protected Activity

Awareness of pervasive vehicle tracking may deter people from attending protests, places of worship, medical facilities, or other constitutionally protected activities out of fear of being monitored.

Know Your Rights

What You Can Do

Your rights vary by state and municipality, but there are concrete steps you can take to understand and respond to surveillance in your community.

File a FOIA Request

Submit a Freedom of Information Act request to your local police department to learn whether Flock cameras are deployed in your area, what data is collected, and who can access it.

Attend City Meetings

Show up to city council and police oversight board meetings to ask questions about surveillance contracts. Many Flock deployments are decided with little public input.

Advocate for Ordinances

Push for local surveillance oversight ordinances — policies requiring public approval of surveillance technology, data minimization, and regular audits of who is accessing plate reader data.

Understand Your State Law

Some states — including California, New Hampshire, and Utah — have enacted ALPR-specific regulations. Know what protections, if any, exist in your jurisdiction.

Data Lifecycle

Where Your Data Goes

Once a Flock camera reads your plate, your data travels through a complex pipeline with multiple access points and limited individual rights.

CAMERA
Roadside ALPR
Plate + timestamp
GPS location
CLOUD DB
Flock servers
30-day default
Encrypted at rest
LAW ENFORCEMENT
2,600+ agencies
Cross-jurisdiction
No warrant req'd

Also accessible to

Homeowner associations, private businesses, and neighborhood watch groups who purchase direct Flock subscriptions — with even less regulatory oversight.

Retention Concerns

The default 30-day retention period can be extended. Some contracts allow data to be retained longer, and there is often no automatic deletion guarantee.

No Opt-Out Mechanism

Unlike some digital services, there is no mechanism for residents to opt out of having their vehicle captured, stored, or queried through Flock's surveillance network.

Policy Checklist
for Your City

If your municipality is considering or already using Flock cameras, these are the minimum protections advocates recommend pushing for.

Mandatory public approvalCity council vote required before any surveillance technology contract is signed, with 30-day public comment period.

Data minimization policyClear limits on what data is stored, for how long, and automatic deletion after the minimum necessary retention period.

Access audit logsAll queries of the ALPR database must be logged with officer ID, date, time, and stated purpose — and subject to periodic public audit.

Ban on cross-jurisdictional sharingProhibit sharing of locally collected data with out-of-jurisdiction agencies without a warrant or formal legal process.

Annual transparency reportPublicly published report on camera locations, number of reads, agency access, and any data breaches or misuse investigations.

The Scale of
Flock Deployment

Flock Safety has grown from a startup to one of the largest private surveillance infrastructure providers in the United States in under a decade.

3B+

Plates read annually

$4B+

Valuation (est. 2023)

47

States deployed

~0

Federal regulations

Further Reading

Resources & Reports

Organization · ACLU

You Are Being Tracked: How License Plate Readers Are Being Used to Record Americans' Movements

The ACLU's foundational report on the proliferation of license plate readers and the privacy implications of mass vehicle tracking.

Read Report

Organization · EFF

Automated License Plate Readers: EFF's Analysis of the Technology and Legal Framework

The Electronic Frontier Foundation's deep dive into ALPR technology, including Flock Safety, with legal analysis and advocacy resources.

Read Report

Organization · EPIC

License Plate Readers: EPIC's Policy Analysis and Legislative Recommendations

EPIC's ongoing coverage of license plate reader regulations, court cases, and policy advocacy at the state and federal level.

Read Report

Get Involved

Privacy Doesn't
Defend Itself

Surveillance infrastructure expands when communities aren't watching. Join thousands of residents, advocates, and policymakers working to ensure that public safety technology is accountable to the public.

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