When the Watchers Get Watched: How One Public Records Request Shook the Surveillance Machine

Across the United States, towns are discovering that the real power in surveillance isn’t in the cameras but in the communities now demanding they come down.

Aerial view of a compact, tree-lined neighborhood in a loose grid with roads and parking, mixed residential and civic buildings including a red-roofed square building, a blue-roofed octagonal pavilion, several swimming pools and playgrounds, and dense forest surrounding the area.

The legal pushback against Flock is starting to take real shape.

For years, the company sold its cameras as a convenient public safety tool, a kind of low-cost, high-tech neighborhood watch.

Red shield logo with three stylized black and white arrows curving outward, next to the text 'RECLAIM THE NET' with 'RECLAIM' in grey and 'THE NET' in red

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