That's what a New York Police Department lieutenant wrote on LinkedIn after someone sent him a link to the Atlas of Surveillance, EFF's moonshot effort to document which U.S. law enforcement agencies are using which technologies, including drones, automated license plate readers and face recognition.
If you haven't checked out the Atlas of Surveillance recently, or ever before, you absolutely should.
It includes a searchable database and an interactive map, and anyone can download the data for their own projects.
As this collaboration with the University of Nevada Reno's Reynolds School of Journalism finishes its fifth year, we are proud to announce that we've hit a major milestone: more than 12,000 data points that document the use of police surveillance nationwide, all collected using open-source investigative techniques, data journalism, and public records requests.
We've come a long way since the Atlas of Surveillance launched as a pilot project with RSJ back in the spring semester of 2019.
By that summer, with the help of a few dozen journalism students, we had accumulated 250 data points, focused on the 23 counties along the U.S.-Mexico border.
When we launched the formal website in 2020, we had collected a little more than 5,500 data points.
Today's dataset represents more than a 100% increase since then.
That isn't the only major milestone we accomplished this year.
To collect data for the project, EFF and RSJ designed a tool called Report Back, which allows us to distribute micro-research assignments to students in our classes.
As part of our Atlas efforts, we began to see Fusus-a company working to bring real-time surveillance to local police departments via camera registries and real-time crime centers-appear more frequently as a tool used by law enforcement.
We're proud to have built the Atlas because it's meant to be a tool for the public, and we're excited to see more and more people are discovering it.
This year, we clocked about 250,000 pageviews, more than double what we've seen in previous years.
This tells us not only that more people care about police surveillance than ever before, but that we're better able to inform them about what's happening locally in their communities.
One of the primary goals of the Atlas of Surveillance project is to reach journalists, academics, activists, and policymakers, so they can use our data to better inform their research.
The Markup combined Atlas data with census data, crime data, and emails obtained through the California Public Records Act to investigate the Los Angeles Police Department's relationship with Ring, Amazon's home video surveillance subsidiary.
Print, radio, and television journalists continue to turn to the Atlas as a resource, either to build stories about police surveillance or provide context.
In 2024, EFF will expand the Atlas to capture more technologies used by law enforcement agencies.
We are also planning new features, functions and fixes that allow users to better browse and analyze the data.
Of course, you should keep an eye out in the new year for new workshops, talks, and other opportunities to learn more and get involved with the project.
This Cyber News was published on www.eff.org. Publication date: Thu, 28 Dec 2023 16:43:04 +0000