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Cheap automatic license plate readers are creeping into neighborhoods (slate.com)
25 points by jseliger on July 10, 2019 | hide | past | favorite | 16 comments


There are an increasing number of things that were so person-hour intensive before that they were legal but not practical, with the understanding the police would only do them if they had a good reason, like following a suspect as they went about their day. Now with the ability to do it so cheaply I think we have to acknowledge that in these cases a difference in degree has essentially become a difference in kind and we need to go back from square one and evaluate how we use these tools.


I want one. Specifically I want one that includes a directional microphone to detect noise violations, then automatically tweets the lic plate number, time, street, direction to the police, and then continues to collect the information providing predictive tweets to the police (Lic plate XYZ is likely to pass at location A at time Y with a volume 10x the legal limit). I live next to a noisy street and sound insulating my bedroom is over $10k. This would be a much cheaper solution to the neighbors crotch rocket at 4am.


Brilliant idea, I have the same problem, but unfortunately for me the main culprit is London's overground and the neighborhood cars are a small part of the noise troubles so I'm not sure how much good it'd do me


It is dead easy to set up a raspberry pi to do license plate recognition.

In python, it's probably 10 lines of code.

Once you import the openalpr library, then you get a routine that in one call takes a jpg image and returns an array of <plate-number>, <confidence %> pairs.


Sucks they charge to use the python library



OOOOOOO i misread their documentation, thank you!


License plates are public information. There is no website or state DMV that you, a private citizen, can go to and get the information on the plate's owner.


That is true, but there are ways to get it either with some footwork or money. The second concern is tracking people who you know. Imagine if I tracked every time my neighbors cars entered or left their garages, and every guest that came and saw them. This is perfectly legal, but also very creepy.


It's not only about the big companies being accountable for holding data. What about private individuals uploading gigabytes of data to the public web?


So could someone mount these cameras on private property with views of major highways and stand up a subscription service?


Your car, lets say a towing rig, is a private property. This business model was in place 10, maybe even 20 years ago.


ah .. i can see aggregating images from cloud connected dash cams as well.



Any idea how much this service costs?


no idea, didn't look at it too hard.




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