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Sunday, June 23, 2024

Government officials across the U.S. frequently promote the supposed, and often anecdotal, public safety benefits of automated license plate readers (ALPRs), but rarely do they examine how this very same technology poses risks to public safety that may outweigh the crimes they are attempting to address in the first place. read more


More than a million people are under flood warnings in the upper US Midwest on Sunday after days of heavy rain that forced evacuations and rescues in several states. read more


Saturday, June 22, 2024

A Southern California woman whose luggage went missing after an American Airlines flight into Hollywood Burbank Airport says she later found her bag in a Hollywood homeless encampment. read more


Get a new hobby if you enjoy popping plastic air pillows from your Amazon packages because the company is aiming to trash the box fillers in North America for good by year-end. read more


Special Counsel Jack Smith is asking U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon to urgently grant his request to thwart what he called "foreseeable danger to law enforcement" posed by former President Donald Trump. read more


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More from the article...

... When law enforcement uses ALPRs to document the comings and goings of every driver on the road, regardless of a nexus to a crime, it results in gargantuan databases of sensitive information, and few agencies are equipped, staffed, or trained to harden their systems against quickly evolving cybersecurity threats.

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), a component of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, released an advisory last week that should be a wake up call to the thousands of local government agencies around the country that use ALPRs to surveil the travel patterns of their residents by scanning their license plates and "fingerprinting" their vehicles. The bulletin outlines seven vulnerabilities in Motorola Solutions' Vigilant ALPRs, including missing encryption and insufficiently protected credentials.

To give a sense of the scale of the data collected with ALPRs, EFF found that just 80 agencies in California using primarily Vigilant technology, collected more than 1.6 billion license plate scans (CSV) in 2022. This data can be used to track people in real time, identify their "pattern of life," and even identify their relations and associates. An EFF analysis from 2021 found that 99.9% of this data is unrelated to any public safety interest when it's collected. If accessed by malicious parties, the information could be used to harass, stalk, or even extort innocent people.

Unlike location data a person shares with, say, GPS-based navigation app Waze, ALPRs collect and store this information without consent and there is very little a person can do to have this information purged from these systems. ...



... but, what does fmr Pres trump really say?

Trump Goes Full Hitler by Calling Political Foes Vermin' (November 2023)
nymag.com

... Since the 2016 presidential campaign, the question of whether it's appropriate to compare Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler has come up repeatedly. Trump has used a slogan popularized by Nazi sympathizers, dined with antisemites, evoked white supremacist tropes, and demonized the press and his political foes as the "enemy of the people," to cite just a few examples of his allegedly Nazi-like behavior. Plus, days before the Capitol riot, the nation's top general, Mark Milley, reportedly warned aides that America was facing a "Reichstag moment" because Trump was preaching "the gospel of the Fhrer" with his stolen-election lies.

When people point out that this is all a little too Hitler-y for comfort, they're often told they're being hysterical. However, it's getting harder to deny that Trump is using Nazi rhetoric. Last month, Trump said undocumented immigrants are "poisoning the blood of our country." In Mein Kampf, Hitler repeatedly described Jews and migrants as "poisons" to the "blood" of Germany and the Aryan race. Trump's remark generated a few headlines but largely flew under the radar as it came 37 minutes into a video interview with the obscure right-leaning website the National Pulse.

Over the weekend, Trump used some Nazi terminology in a far more high-profile setting. During a Veterans Day speech on Saturday, he told a crowd in Claremont, New Hampshire, that his political enemies are "like vermin." Both Hitler and Italy's Benito Mussolini compared their enemies to rodents during their rise to power in the 1920s and 1930s. Trump said:

Today, especially, in honor of our great veterans on Veterans Day, we pledge to you that we will root out the communists, Marxists, fascists, and the radical-left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country " that lie and steal and cheat on elections and will do anything possible. They'll do anything, whether legally or illegally, to destroy America and to destroy the American Dream.

The real threat is not from the racial right; the real threat is from the radical left, and it's growing every day. Every single day. The threat from outside forces is far less sinister, dangerous, and grave than the threat from within. Our threat is from within. Because if you have a capable, competent, smart, tough leader " Russia, China, North Korea " they're not going to want to play with us.


It seems clear from the video that Trump was reading from his prepared remarks, not ad-libbing: ...



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