Floxk AI is a startup that apparently runs highly suspicious police data collection services. As a fun bonus, it sells this data to private bidders and retains no liability for any mess-ups.
Apparently, it uses a Bluetooth system to relay some of this information. And seems to generally have awful security...
The real scandal seems to be the use of data brokers' data, re-selling/owning the data collected from publicly funded cameras, and also using bluetooth and ostensibly other outdated security.
toomuchtodo · 3h ago
The scandals you mention have been reported on in depth by 404media, which has led to state and congressional investigation. A Google search will provide technical details about their cameras and the Android/hardware stack that operates them.
theamk · 3h ago
for such a well-documented repo, the complete lack of sample outputs is surprising.
I don't want to run the code, just show me some perturbed plates!
nxpnsv · 2h ago
I guess benn jordan assumed you would watch the video on yt before finding the repo
ChrisArchitect · 24m ago
Aside: this is the third or fourth time this week I've seen a repo/project shared here with some visual output component and no examples shown in the Readme or anywhere and multiple people asking about it. What's with these maintainers missing that key aspect? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
on_the_train · 48s ago
Might actually be interaction bait. Just like those Reddit posts with false info or typos. Gets people to interact, just like us
radar1310 · 1h ago
Highly illegal in most likely all states.Every state has laws against obstruction of license plates.
spicybright · 20m ago
If you see the video, the initial iteration just looks like specs of mud on the plate with the letters+numbers still fully readable. His ultimate goal is a custom plate frame that looks normal to the human eye but can block camera readings.
I can see this as being legal because it's still human readable.
Plate readers aren't expected to be 100% reliable as is (angles, lighting, network goes down, etc.) Plates get dirty, sometimes rusty. Also you can't test your own plate for machine readability against all the different types of systems cops use, so how could you reasonably know the issue is on your end and how to fix it?
Floxk AI is a startup that apparently runs highly suspicious police data collection services. As a fun bonus, it sells this data to private bidders and retains no liability for any mess-ups.
Apparently, it uses a Bluetooth system to relay some of this information. And seems to generally have awful security...
Any thoughts? Or further projects on this?
https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...
The real scandal seems to be the use of data brokers' data, re-selling/owning the data collected from publicly funded cameras, and also using bluetooth and ostensibly other outdated security.
I don't want to run the code, just show me some perturbed plates!
I can see this as being legal because it's still human readable.
Plate readers aren't expected to be 100% reliable as is (angles, lighting, network goes down, etc.) Plates get dirty, sometimes rusty. Also you can't test your own plate for machine readability against all the different types of systems cops use, so how could you reasonably know the issue is on your end and how to fix it?