A surveillance machine in the US that's "the worst offender but also a model for the nearly 18,000 state and local police departments across the country."
The NYPD camera outside Pamela Wridt and Robert Sauve's bedroom window is just one of tens of thousands owned by the department. The footage from these cameras feeds into the Domain Awareness System, which also includes data from privately-owned security cameras.
A lawsuit has been filed against the city of New York, alleging that the system violates their First and Fourth Amendment rights to free association, expression, and privacy.
The suit claims that the surveillance machine enables the NYPD to uncover constitutionally protected activities such as political expression, religious practice, or private association. The plaintiffs said they felt "violated" when they learned about the camera's existence and the reach of the surveillance is largely unknown to many city dwellers.
The Domain Awareness System receives public scrutiny but has been criticized for its potential to entrench mass surveillance. The lawsuit aims to shed light on other private companies and federal agencies that have access to data collected by the NYPD.
Companies like Microsoft, Clearview AI, Patternizr, and Dataminr bolstered the NYPD's surveillance system, which feeds into controversial policing tools like the citywide gang database and ShotSpotter.
The NYPD camera outside Pamela Wridt and Robert Sauve's bedroom window is just one of tens of thousands owned by the department. The footage from these cameras feeds into the Domain Awareness System, which also includes data from privately-owned security cameras.
A lawsuit has been filed against the city of New York, alleging that the system violates their First and Fourth Amendment rights to free association, expression, and privacy.
The suit claims that the surveillance machine enables the NYPD to uncover constitutionally protected activities such as political expression, religious practice, or private association. The plaintiffs said they felt "violated" when they learned about the camera's existence and the reach of the surveillance is largely unknown to many city dwellers.
The Domain Awareness System receives public scrutiny but has been criticized for its potential to entrench mass surveillance. The lawsuit aims to shed light on other private companies and federal agencies that have access to data collected by the NYPD.
Companies like Microsoft, Clearview AI, Patternizr, and Dataminr bolstered the NYPD's surveillance system, which feeds into controversial policing tools like the citywide gang database and ShotSpotter.