• This California city just approved the use of Flock drones as fir

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Wed Jun 10 21:15:26 2026
    This California city just approved the use of Flock drones as first responders, but residents are worried about 'militarization and surveillance'

    Date:
    Wed, 10 Jun 2026 20:00:00 +0000

    Description:
    Stockton, California, just invested millions of dollars in Flock drones to
    act as first responders.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter Stockton has approved a $3.15 investment in Flock drones The drones will act as airborne first responders Residents have raised privacy and surveillance concerns Surveillance and privacy are huge concerns for individuals across the world right now, and municipal leaders in the California city of Stockton are the latest to
    attract criticism for a controversial drone expansion program that's ostensibly being undertaken in the interests of public safety.

    As reported by Stocktonia , the city council recently gave the thumbs up to a $3.15 million investment in drones manufactured by Flock, on top of the automatic license readers the company already supplies. These drones can act as airborne first responders, giving police eyes on a 911 call situation in
    as little as 30 seconds. The sales pitch is that officers will be better informed when they arrive, and that some incidents could be handled remotely. "It'll really enhance what we already have, in that we get quick deployments, real time updates for officers on scene," said Police Lt. David Padula when the deal was approved. Latest Videos From Watch full video here:

    However, while city leaders all liked the drone program, there has been massive public opposition against it. Issues around privacy, immigration enforcement, and mass surveillance have been raised by residents not just in regards to how the drones are used, but how the data they collect is stored and shared.

    These drones aren't widely used in the US, but there are active programs in some cities in states, including Texas, Indiana, and Connecticut. The license plate readers are far more widespread, with more than 100,000 now in use .
    You may like Skydio just landed a record $52 million drones order from the US military Researchers propose drone-based system to boost mobile network coverage Japan joins Australia in building cardboard drones and theyre scarily cheap Data collection and privacy Flock drones are designed to
    respond to incidents in minutes (Image credit: Flock) "It sends the wrong message," said local activist group The Stockton Community Check-In Booth in
    a statement after the council decision. "While our residents continue to struggle under the financial impacts of this administration and economy, Stockton continues to invest in militarization and surveillance."

    "Private organizations can control your data from those Flock cameras, and because they're privately owned, you can't even use freedom of information to find out what they have about you," said Stockton Republican congressional candidate John McBride, calling the use of the drones "a total invasion of privacy". Get daily insight, inspiration and deals in your inbox Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more. Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

    According to Flock, local agencies remain in control of the data. It states that it doesn't work with ICE, and that federal agencies are blocked from discovering or requesting data held by Stockton. Drone flights are logged on
    a public-facing dashboard, and Stockton police will own 100% of the data they collect.

    However, Flock has run into trouble elsewhere: It has previously been found
    to be sharing access with US Customs and Border Protection in Colorado and Illinois , though it says these practices have now been stopped. In Texas, police used a Flock camera network to track the movements of a woman who had an abortion .

    In other areas, authorities haven't been so welcoming to Flock and its systems. In Mountain View, California, a Flock network of cameras was
    recently scrapped over concerns about unauthorized access. Follow TechRadar
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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/cameras/drones/this-california-city-just-approved-th e-use-of-flock-drones-as-first-responders-but-residents-are-worried-about-mili tarization-and-surveillance


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