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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsSURVEILLANCE IN AMERICA IS ABOUT TO GET A WHOLE LOT WORSE - What is being done about it?
"A defense contractor is selling technology that enables license plate reading cameras to also sense driver and passenger phones, laptops, and even pet microchips as you drive past. Police and others can buy it as of last week."
"Leonardo S.p.A. is headquartered in Rome, Italy. The product it is selling to American law enforcement would almost certainly be illegal to deploy in its home country, or anywhere else in Europe.
European law the General Data Protection Regulation, known as GDPR requires companies to get your permission before collecting your personal data. It forbids storing that data indefinitely. The EU AI Act, which took effect this year, restricts technology that identifies and tracks people in public spaces.
The United States of America has no such laws and, in fact, has a federal administration trying to make such laws themselves illegal. Totally normal."
https://alisav.substack.com/p/surveillance-in-america-is-about
Prairie_Seagull
(4,883 posts)Get one now.
erronis
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What Just Broke -- and What Was Already Built
This month, 404 Media -- a technology and privacy investigative outlet -- obtained and published a product sheet for a surveillance system called ELSAG SignalTrace, built by Leonardo US Cyber and Security Solutions, the American arm of Italian defense giant Leonardo S.p.A. The report is spreading fast through privacy, civil liberties, and press freedom communities, but has yet to be covered by mainstram US news outlets. What it describes is a terrifying product that is now available for purchase by American law enforcement, in existence for at least two years -- built quietly, patented quietly, marketed quietly -- while the public had no idea it existed.
On March 26, 2024, Leonardo received US Patent 11,941,716 B2 for "Systems and Methods for Electronic Signature Tracking." The company issued a press release. Almost nobody noticed. By 2025, the technology had a formal product name -- ELSAG SignalTrace -- and an active marketing campaign aimed at law enforcement agencies across the country. General Manager Jason Laquatra described the system's purpose plainly: "The future of LPR [license plate reader] advancements is reliant on enhancing LPR data sets with additional information from various electronic devices to find the individuals police are looking for."
Translation: It is no longer enough for Big Bro to record your car everywhere it goes. They want to know who is inside that car. Down to your pets.