Unlike many of Flock’s cameras, which are designed to capture license plates as people drive by, Flock’s Condor cameras are pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) cameras designed to record and track people, not vehicles. Condor cameras can be set to automatically zoom in on people’s faces as they walk through a parking lot, down a public street, or play on a playground, or they can be controlled manually, according to marketing material on Flock’s website. We watched Condor cameras zoom in on a woman walking her dog on a bike path in suburban Atlanta; a camera followed a man walking through a Macy’s parking lot in Bakersfield; surveil children swinging on a swingset at a playground; and film high-res video of people sitting at a stoplight in traffic. In one case, we were able to watch a man rollerblade down Brookhaven, Georgia’s Peachtree Creek Greenway bike path. The Flock camera zoomed in on him and tracked him as he rolled past. Minutes later, he showed up on another exposed camera livestream further down the bike path. The camera’s resolution was good enough that we were able to see that, when he stopped beneath one of the cameras, he was watching rollerblading videos on his phone.
The wave of surveillance has already crashed over us and we are just playing catch up. It often feels like the infrastructure of the 1984 surveillance state has already been constructed: cameras, cell phones, wifi networks, and the internet in general are already recording a good deal of our movements and actions and interactions.
Our primary hope seems to have been that there would just be too much data for it to matter -- unless they wanted to single you out. But LLMs are pretty good at data analysis. So what prevents turning on a system for tracking everyone's movements at all times?
There are already cities with tracking systems that can trace an individual's entire route from the moment they enter the surveillance radius until the end. In São Paulo, this is glorified as an example of security, while they keep a very close watch. This level of surveillance is only possible because private camera owners are very careless with security, adding their private cameras to anyone's network without even knowing.
Regarding surveillance, they don't even need faces for that. With AI, it's possible to track faces, clothing, and even the way someone walks. Scary times we live in.