Flock Safety

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Flock Safety is the creator and operator of the Flock cameras. Flock cameras are surveillance cameras featuring many functionalities, including but not limited to: Scanning vehicle license plates; logging make, model, color, and "distinguishing features" of vehicles, gunshot detection and, facial recognition. They operate a network of 40,000[1] devices across the United States in 5,000[2] communities. They often operate under private contracts, such as with HOA's and commercial contracts, and public contracts with local law enforcement. Flock Safety justifies the legality of its mass surveillance systems on the basis of the legal principles that individuals have "no reasonable expectation of privacy in public spaces." Since their surveillance systems are deployed on roads that are considered public courts have generally held that their mass surveillance does not violate privacy rights. The company "processes over 20 billion scans of vehicles per month"[3] In March of 2025 Flock raised $275 million[4] in a funding round bringing total value to $7.5 Billion[4]. Several sources estimate total funding in the range of $650M to $950M+[5]. Flock has claimed to have surpassed $300 million in ARR[4] as of 2025 and cited 70% year over year growth. They are estimated to have over 1,000 employees.

Flock Safety
Basic information
Founded 2017
Legal Structure Private
Industry Surveillance Technology
Also known as
Official website https://www.flocksafety.com

Consumer-impact summary

Public privacy

Privacy violations are many and are obvious, the continuous tracking of the American public, the permanent surveillance archive, the logging of "distinguishing features on vehicles", timestamps, and the searchable database all, while indeed in conjunction with the notion that privacy cannot be assumed in public spaces, violate a person's right to privacy. Traditional observation in public spaces, which doesn't violate Fourth Amendment Rights, is fundamentally different from the generation of a permanent searchable archive that is created with the flock cameras. Critics argue that the large-scale data aggregation transforms the fleeting public exposure into a detailed log of personal behavior, which can expose religious beliefs, sexual orientation, political affiliations, medical conditions, and other highly personal aspects of identity, all traditionally protected by the Fourth Amendment. The system also offers no public opt out options forcing all users of the road to have their locations tracked and logged, raising more risks of misuse, profiling, and long term monitoring. U.S. courts have traditionally held that there is no reasonable expectation of privacy however some rulings do emphasize that this principle does not strip a citizen of their constitutional rights. In rulings such as Carpenter v. United States (2018)[6] Judge Jamilah D. LeCruise stated that "A person doesn't surrender all Fourth Amendment protection by venturing into a public space"[7] reflecting the ongoing public sentiment over the use of automated indefinite surveillance records. Furthermore, the use of flock cameras by law enforcement is a direct violations of a person's Fourth Amendment rights as the data that the police department can access are things which would traditionally need a warrant to access.

Business model

Flock Safety operates a "surveillance as a service" model where the company owns, deploys, and maintains its cameras and sensor infrastructure then charges municipalities, law enforcement, HOAs, business and private parties recurring fees for the ability to access the surveillance network and data. This model monetizes and subsidizes mass surveillance of the American public partially with tax dollars. Unfortunately they have learned to take advantage of the American system and have lined their pockets with $300,000,000+[4] per year from the mass surveillance of the American public and the erosion of Americans' Fourth Amendment rights. Furthermore their infrastructure could very easily lead to the degradation of First Amendment rights (Rights to free speech) and Ninth Amendment rights (rights not explicitly stated in the constitution are still retained by the people).

Incidents

This is a list of all consumer-protection incidents this company is involved in. Any incidents not mentioned here can be found in the Flock Safety category.

Incident One (Sep 18 2025)

A lawsuit[8] in Norfolk, VA, revealed that the city's ALPR system has logged the location of a plaintiff's vehicle 526 times in 4 months. The 2nd plaintiff in the case had their vehicle's position logged 849 times in a similar time period. The ALPR system is provided by Flock to Norfolk Police Department, in a deal costing $2.2m, in return for Flock providing services through to the end of 2027. The camera installation began in 2023 and at present there are 176 cameras around the city. The lawsuit is asking for the plaintiff's data to be deleted and the cameras disabled, arguing that these are an infringement of the Fourth Amendment and constitute a warrantless search. Flock counters this assertion by claiming that "LPRs do not constitute a warrantless search because they take point-in-time photos of cars in public and cannot continuously track the movements of any individual".

See also

  1. Flock License Plate Readers

References

  1. Polcyn, Bryan (24 Oct 2023). "Mapping Flock cameras, police 'secrecy' varies by department". Fox 6 Milwaukee. Retrieved 26 Sep 2025.
  2. "City Leaders Choose Flock Safety: A Proven, Community-Focused Public Safety Solution". Flock Safety. 28 May 2025. Retrieved 26 Sep 2025.
  3. "Real-Time Vehicle Leads, Nationwide". Flock Safety. Retrieved 26 Sep 2025.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "Accelerating Innovation: Flock Secures $275 Million to Advance Crime-Solving Technology". 13 Mar 2025. Retrieved 26 Sep 2025.
  5. Hu, Crystal (13 Mar 2025). "US startup Flock Safety raises $275 million to fund manufacturing plant, R&D". Reuters. Retrieved 26 Sep 2025.
  6. "Common Wealth v. Bell 2024" (PDF).
  7. "CARPENTER v. UNITED STATES" (PDF).
  8. Collier, Kevin (2025-09-18). "Police cameras tracked one driver 526 times in four months, lawsuit says". NBC News. Archived from the original on 2025-10-08. Retrieved 2025-10-26.