I saw this vehicle there this morning right before 10A. I noticed there was nobody in the car, however an open laptop. How about a local news station check them out . . . . KFOR??
What a great idea to tip the media to look into. They may be perfectly innocent but they may not be.
Sorry to burst your bubble, but your hopes of KFOR doing a great expose and busting this thing wide open aren't going to happen. They've already covered it at least half a dozen times. Some of the articles have already been posted in this very thread.
But if you still think it's a great idea, their number is 405-424-4444. News hotline is 405-478-NEWS.
Yesterday driving on one of the local interstates seen a cop car getting behind cars then moving to next lane and getting behind others and so on. Looked like he was scanning plates. I watched for a couple miles and he was from one lane to another pretty much non stop.
Anyone that has unpaid parking/traffic tickets better get them paid. I would assume they can tell if you have a warrant out for arrest as they scan your tag.
I'm in the auto body business, and about 20% of out customers were hit by uninsured drivers. That's a big number and it hasn't changed much in over 20 years. I don't like the idea of a police state, and this stuff feels like it. But, I'm willing to go along with this.
I’m just afraid the targeting of uninsured motorists is just a way to get the public to agree to the idea of these independent tag scanners. My fear is the next step - or, really just an expanding of what they are currently doing - utilizing tag scanners to track vehicle movements. Like I’ve mentioned before, these images are already made available in other states for uses beyond insurance, speed and moving violation enforcement. The private sector can pay to access these images.
This program gets a giant thumbs down from me.
Three choices when dealing with those who don’t have insurance: 1) Do nothing; 2) Impound the car; or 3) Mail a ticket. Of those three, the third is the most reasonable for both the uninsured car owner, and those he might hit.
Don't recall it being mentioned..... Do these scanners read tribal and out of state tags too?
So how do we get a tribal tag? Can we join a tribe?
Hopefully someone will come out with a scrambler to send a bad signal to these scammers.
What if the bad guys get these scanners? They can track where you live and use gps to see when someone is not home and no telling what. I think potentially the bad outweighs the good with these things.
Actually OKCRT has a point.
There are many real world uses for this data that doesn't sit well with me and shouldn't sit well with the public.
From my personal experience;
1.) I personally know of at least two sex trafficking victims that were tracked down by their pimps who paid a PI to run their tag and was able to find the city and state they were residing in. In one case, there was so much data he could track down where she worked (because her car was continuously scanned in the parking lot) and the apartment complex she was living in.
2.) Abusive husbands have used this data to locate an ex that is hiding from them.
3.) I've read numerous police reports where police go to these databases looking for people (often people not yet charged or even convicted of a crime) and they don't need a warrant to get this data. Additionally, it has been shown many times, police will also access this type of data for their personal use. Police already often run tags of women they find attractive to get all their info.
Other Real World Uses:
1.) Police now can totally circumvent the warrant process and simply have a private company do the tracking for them.
2.) Some companies compile the data geographically. Meaning, law enforcement or private citizens can request all the tag numbers that have been recorded at a specific location. Then reverse search those numbers for the identities of the registered drivers. The location could be specific businesses, politicians offices/residences, specific neighborhoods, whatever.
3.) I see nothing preventing law enforcement from requesting that one of these private companies target specific locations (streets, businesses, residences) so LE can access that data later and without a warrant or just cause.
4.) Anyone can now simply go on "fishing expeditions" to try and find or even just imply dirt on anyone - a rival, a politician, a co-worker, a spouse, you name it.
5.) Insurance companies could access this data in the future when determining your rates. Same could even go with health insurance (oops, your car was seen pretty regularly at bars, you're a higher risk for car and health insurance. *It's already been shown some of those companies currently check your social media.)
There is nothing "tinfoil" about where this is heading and already is.
Why go through the tag scanning companies, when you carry a cellphone with you 24/7?
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