Here in my car, I feel safest of all. I can lock all my doors. It’s the only way to live, in cars.*
* Quote from Gary Numan, “Cars”, 1979
You may feel that your car is your last private refuge in this busy world. But there’s someone along for the ride: Big Brother. And you’d be surprised what he knows about you, thanks to modern technology.
Cell Phones:
Your cell phone is constantly transmitting its location, and services like Google Dashboard’s location history can show exactly where you were at any date in time. Don’t want to be tracked? Turn off your cellphone.
E-Z Pass:
Even when you are nowhere near a toll booth, E-ZPass detectors can monitor your location. Want to stay anonymous? Keep your E-ZPass wrapped in aluminum foil in your glove box.
Highway Cameras:
The extensive network of traffic cameras on our interstates and parkways is used mostly to monitor accidents. But State Police can also watch individual vehicles. The cameras are even available to the public online. But state law specifically forbids using these cameras to write speeding tickets.
License Plate Readers (LPRs):
This is the newest and most powerful tracking tech, as I saw in a ride-along a few years ago with my local PD. These cameras mounted on police cars can scan up to 1,800 license plates a minute as cars drive by at speed.
As the plate number is recognized, it is transmitted to a national crime computer and compared against a list of wanted vehicles and scofflaws. If it gets a “hit,” a dashboard screen in the cop car flashes a red signal and beeps, detailing the plate number and infraction. In just one hour driving through my town, we made stops for outstanding warrants, lack of insurance and stolen plates. (Some towns also use LPR’s for parking enforcement in train station parking lots, forgoing the need for hang-tags or stickers.)
While this may lead to very efficient law enforcement, LPRs also have a potentially darker side: the data about plate number, location and time can be stored forever.
Faced with a string of unsolved burglaries, Darien police used their LPR to track every car entering the targeted neighborhood and looked for patterns of out-of-town cars driving through at the time of the burglaries and made an arrest.
But the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is concerned about how long cops can store this data and how it should be used. They laud the Connecticut State Police policy of only storing data for 90 days.
In the early days of LPRs in 2012, an ACLU staffer filed an FOI request for his car’s plate number and found it had been tracked four times by 10 police departments in a database that had 3 million scan records.
So enjoy your car. But realize that none of us have any privacy.
About the author: Jim Cameron is founder of The Commuter Action Group, and a member of the Darien RTM. The opinions expressed in this column are only his own. You can reach him at [email protected]
For a full collection of “Talking Transportation” columns, see www.talkingtransportation.blogspot.com