Police Organization Wants Cop-Spotting Dropped From Waze App
An anonymous reader writes "The Register reports on a request from the US National Sheriffs' Association, which "wants Google to block its crowd-sourced traffic app Waze from being able to report the position of police officers, saying the information is putting officer's lives at risk." From the article: "'The police community needs to coordinate an effort to have the owner, Google, act like the responsible corporate citizen they have always been and remove this feature from the application even before any litigation or statutory action,' AP reports Sheriff Mike Brown, the chairman of the NSA's technology committee, told the association's winter conference in Washington....Brown called the app a 'police stalker,' and said being able to identify where officers were located could put them at personal risk. Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, said his members had concerns as well. 'I can think of 100 ways that it could present an officer-safety issue,' Pasco said. 'There's no control over who uses it. So, if you're a criminal and you want to rob a bank, hypothetically, you use your Waze.'"
Stop setting up cash-cow speed traps. :P
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
This is about ticket revenue. Nothing more, and nothing less.
Finding out where the police are should be as easy as it is for them to find you.
If they are on the road and performing their jobs, they have no reasonable expectation of privacy. In fact, knowing where the nearest police officer can be found could enhance the safety of the general public.
"We're afraid someone will use this knowledge to attack police officers because they know where we'll be!" Right, because you can't magically call some 3 digit number to summon them to you if you're planning a horrific deed? Some crazed lunatic needs Waze to carry out his dastardly plan? Or is it rather that you don't really want people to know exactly which billboard you're hiding behind at the side of the road to nail people for going 3 mph over the limit?
Nothing in here says anything about the NSA. Could we at least get a decent website.
John
There totally was a greater-than sign in the subject line.
Every time I see a cop doing something useless like sitting at the side of the road I want to see their budget cut. They do that crap instead of helping with real crimes. And don't say "but the traffic cops are the same cops that would be investigating crimes" because it's all under one budget.
...you mean the police don't like being stalked, electronically followed, and reported on without a warrant?
Waze has been around for over 6 years. If this were a legitimate concern why can he not point to a single incident of someone doing exactly this rather than merely spreading FUD?
Then you forgot to escape it. < > posts just fine.
Lions don't like it when antelope announce when they've spotted them either.
Maybe the police shouldn't treat citizens as prey.
Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, said his members had concerns as well. 'I can think of 100 ways that it could present an officer-safety issue,' Pasco said. 'There's no control over who uses it. So, if you're a criminal and you want to rob a bank, hypothetically, you use your Waze.'"
If bank robbers only rob banks far away from where the cops are, and are gone by the time the cops get there, doesn't that LOWER the chances of an armed confrontation? Just saying ...
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
If they were really afraid for their lives, they wouldn't make the locations of police stations known, nor would they drive marked cars or wear uniforms.
If they want money, give it to them in coin roll for, as suppositories.
...saying that if you're out in public you have no expectation of privacy?
You stop surveilling me, and I'll stop surveilling you.
Waze is just people talking to people. I'm pretty sure we already have a law that covers this situation.
"saying the information is putting officer's lives at risk"
I'm pretty sure the recent increase in behavior trends in Law Enforcement are what's putting officers lives at risk.
( Pro Tip: Keep killing unarmed folks and the masses eventually will break out the pitchforks and torches )
Hell, to be fun, they should remove the COP logo from Waze and replace it with a Pistol instead to reflect the increased likelihood of being shot.
If you have a BEL or Escort radar detector and subscribe to Escort Live, you will see that EL also uses Waze data for its cop-alerts.
This is all about cash, not safety.
Perhaps the police should stop behaving in was that make non-criminals scared of them. The number of dangerous criminals in society is really very small. If this app is downloaded more than a few hundred times that would indicate that more people than just hardened criminals want to keep tabs on cops. Just the download counter for the app could be read as a social barometer of public trust.
Also, the watchmen don't like being watched? Tough shit. You want more power than the average person, you had better get used to extra scrutiny too.
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
Is it about avoiding policemen altogether or tracking them down? If you use both essentially opposite arguments in one paragraph, you are more or less throwing sh... um, stuff to see what sticks. Purely scare-mongering.
Huh?
Police are (or supposed to be) our first line of defense against criminals and other miscreants. Having eaten our bread and taken our shilling, they should be proud of drawing the fire on themselves to protect their masters (that's the rest of the citizenry), not whine the risks...
I tend to think, the whining is done by the pigs among them. The actual officers are fine with it. Right?
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
I find their lack of faith disturbing....
I'd make sure the police weren't around. Therefore, Waze will save lives since I, hypothetical bank robber, would be saving more police lives.
This is better for everybody. Of course, if I were to rob a bank, I'd do it from a position where the police wouldn't even investigate. I'm thinking the Executive Board room.
Police want to be able to (without warrant or cause) track you, record you, search you, go through your cell phone, and whatever else the fancy at the moment but once there is the slightest attempt at any monitoring or oversight of the police they go apeshit about their rights and their safety.
It's so backwards it's almost a parody of the intent of the constitution and government accountability.
Yes, giving in to evil is usually easier than being a decent person.
Waze reports are coming from plain old people out in the open observing police who are also out in the open. If anyone wants to go mess with a cop they hardly need Waze to do so.
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
"...Brown called the app a 'police stalker,' and said being able to identify where officers were located could put them at personal risk."
Oh, that's rich right there...a representative of the fucking NSA trying to label civilians as the group screwing with people's right to privacy.
I can't tell what stench hanging in the air is winning Charlie Sheen style; Irony or Bullshit.
I use Waze virtually every day. It can only be used to spot for cops who are running speedtraps. It doesn't "stalk" them in anyway. It is not very accurate because it relies on someone to note their location, and cops move a lot (say, when they go after a speeder and setup somewhere else or move on with other duties). At best it can bed give you info like "There's been some activity by police looking for speeders around here recently."
If Google caves to this nonsense, I'm going to be very disappointed. And, for the record, never have any reason to use Waze again.
David Whatley
The only way that a traffic flow ap can cause danger to the cops is to stop ripping off the public for fines used to hire more cops. Any idiot can easily figure out a way to lure cops to a spot for bad purposes. And cops going out on a call are in far more danger as the person trying to lure them in has the advantage of preparation as well as choice of location. Cops are way to paranoid in my opinion and they do not have the most dangerous job in town either. Electrical workers and bridge building workers leap to mind.
yup
suck it up or quit.
you know what, just quit. you donut eating pig. go park somewhere else and waste someone else's money. you suck.
Just askin'.
When I was in my late teens I moved out of my parents' house and lived in a city whose police felt predatory, somewhat during the day, but especially after dark. Simple traffic stops would result in at least two units showing up half the time, and at night they were constantly racing around on the main streets, but never could be found in the actual neighborhoods. I've never been into drugs, never driven drunk, and at the time my vehicle was only six years old and in fairly good repair, but it felt like the police were actively looking for an excuse to pull me over. Literally within five miles were three other cities, and I never felt anywhere near as uncomfortable in those cities than I did in the one I lived in at the time.
I now live one city over, and there's a major state university here, but even with all of the youth hijinks and the college dropout slums a few miles from the school it still doesn't feel as predatory. Only time I was pulled over in this city I deserved it, and the officer was professional and civil even if he was firm in issuing me a citation. When pulled over in the previous city it always felt like the officers were just looking for excuses to get tough.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
More generally the police have been conditioned to think that their job is "catching criminals", rather than "preventing crime".
It's harder to catch criminals if the criminals can find out where you are as they'll not commit a crime if they know an officer is close enough to intercede. If the goal was preventing crime that would be a win (one less crime committed), but because the police are evaluated based on number of cases closed that's a loss for the department because they can't prove they did anything when a crime isn't committed.
If preventing crime were the gaol the cops would realize they can just call in fake cop sightings to the app and give the impression that they have all possible locations patrolled, thereby making the app useless to the criminal in the worst case and an efefctive deterrent to the criminal in the best case.
"...hypothetically, you use your Waze.'" Yeah. Let's start legislating everything that's "Hypothetically" possible. That sounds reasonable. + You can't speed around in obviously painted POLICE or SHERIFF vehicles with light bars spewing out Red and blue, and then complain about people knowing where you're at.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-spies-on-millions-of-cars-1422314779
"local authorities" are already given tracking information about wherever my car goes. THEY are stalking ME, under no suspicion of a crime. i am being stalked. i am in danger.
fuck off and DIAF. dumb pigs are dumb.
Are you arguing that this app would increase or decrease the death rate. It's hard to tell because asshole.
There are lots of times when you wouldn't want the public to be able to locate any specific police officer, or indeed any nearest officer without exception.
On the other hand, and especially given the connection with the NSA, it's hard not to read this as "modern technology: all benefits must accrue to the police, with no downsides, ever! Citizens need not apply and yes, we monitor you 24/7".
And there are times when the public most definitely WANTS a police officer. Like when summoning them to a crime scene.
So characterizing this as a "stalking app" sounds like a huge overreach. Could individual officers not drop off the tracking radar when actually necessary? As when they are undercover or staking out a scene or person? Not sure how to resolve the conflict actually. However for a police officer to seriously need to be unfindable, that's not exactly a requirement every hour of every day for every officer.
Unless Sheriff Mike Brown is hyping up the danger? Nah, that would never happen!
Or if someone wanted to attack police officers they would probably go to a police station. Might be one or two hanging around there.
I'm just trying to help out: by identifying stationary vehicles on the highway so others may avoid you.
At least you know when you've pulled someone over about 10 people will spot your vehicles to Waze and hopefully prevent an accident.
The Romans had a saying: "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?" -- "who watches the watchmen?"
Apparently, the sheriff's association would prefer "no one."
Meanwhile, they want unfettered access to track you, to search you at will, to apply force when they deem necessary - with no potential repercussions, and to have their word taken as literal truth in courts of law. In short, they want to answer to no one, and especially not to the public that pays their salaries and that they are sworn to serve.
To have their way, they threaten litigation or new statuatory laws. I suppose that they forget that the public has the right to free speech, and that the police are not the *secret* police in this country.
Well fucking DUH.
Simply because some scumbag COULD be dangerous with the info doesn't mean the cops' desire to be unwatched watchers trumps legitimate use of the technology.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
I wish this app would increase the death rate, but I don't think it will help. The death rate for pigs is lower than that for garbage men, and an order of magnitude below truly dangerous jobs like loggers and commercial fishermen. Every time a pig dies I feel a little safer, and I only wish something as simple as an app could help in that regard.
Around 100 pigs are killed every year.
I'm sure there are a LOT more than that needed to supply all the sausage, pork chops, ham and bacon eaten world wide. I'm sure it's in the millions based on how Iowa smells in the summertime...
Oh, you mean POLICE OFFICERS getting killed in the line of duty... How about we show a bit of respect and refer to them in kind terms...
...would like to register my vote of 'ill stop using waze if they comply with this'
The real reason they don't like Waze reports on cop locations is that it impacts them achieving their ticket quotas. Bank robbers? Give me a break! That is such a rare occurrence relative to anything else that it doesn't even rank... even hypothetically!
so let me get this straight,
Public servants, hmm,,
Since when is it a crime to find a locate the closest one?
Whats the next steps, asking all cellular services to start listening in to all calls and filtering out all refrences to cop locations?
moving past that, when a cop is caught in the back of a krispy creme parking lot snoozing by an innocent individual, will the cop get busted or will the individual get nailed for a civic duty?
Google needs to add pictures to Waze so I can get more points. Its funny in other countries their government wants you to be able to find a Police Officer just incase you need help. In America we need to hide ours because enough people have such a dislike for our protectors. You have rights because the government lets you have them. I'm sure they have enough pull to make Google do whatever they want and spit on the constitution at the same time.
Person who puts the public at risk of death for their own profit complains when public wants to know where they are.
Speed traps are public safety hazards (a hazard on the roadway which causes people to suddenly and without warning hit the brakes) whose purpose is to generate money, not to increase public safety nor to reduce speeding. Just as an example, having inflatable police cars along the roadway is far more effective at reducing speeding, but does not generate revenue. This becomes even more obvious when you consider whether you're likelier to be pulled over on a nice dry summer day or a dangerous blizzard (at the same speed).
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
They also seemed to be used a lot in committing crimes.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Police officers in public performing their duty have no expectation of privacy. Citizens have the right to observe, photograph, film and record law enforcement officers in public while not impeding the officers in the performance of their duties. Citizens have a right to observe and report the location of a police officer in public.
Tell the cops no way - they are public servants in the public, subject to citizen observation and scrutiny.
I think all people should be able to identify and locate a police officer while they are on duty, every single second of audio and video to document their actions should be recorded and available to live stream to the public. Police have far too much power and often act opposite to "protect and serve" to not be held accountable in this way. In the same way an officer would expect that a person who is acting in a lawful way to have nothing to hide, I would expect a law abiding, law enforcing officer to also have nothing to hide. At least while on duty. The physical dangers of being an officer do not change because an app exists to reveal their general position. This data should be available by default. A person in need of service from a police officer should be able to locate one as soon as possible. Its a shame Waze is helping people gain access to police and the first thing police think is "OMG! Common people are stalking me! I am no longer safe!" Sounds like police are very afraid of the public and quick to accuse the common Waze app user of being a hardened criminal, ready to use violence against innocent police. Last time I checked, my taxes don't pay police to control who uses digital applications, my taxes pay police to uphold the law, protect citizens safety even upon death and to service the community while on duty in any way they can. Perhaps the "police community" should consider the sacrifices that must be made to hold such an important and powerful position in society. Afraid of getting stalked by Waze app users in your area local police? Perhaps you were never cut out to be a police officer in the first place. Most law abiding citizens I know avoid police like the plague, tired of a lifetime of constant harassment over traffic violations and other such wastes of time and would use the Waze app (if for anything) to avoid these useless and always costly and insulting encounters. They aren't looking to use an app to hunt down police, get into violent encounters with them and shortly after end up in prison or dead.
Not where they will be, but where their doughnut-eatin'-ass is currently parked. They're in cars that are most definitely mobile -- and likely running with the heat/ac on max. Just sitting there "cruiser spooning" isn't exactly doing their job.
If they're not doing anything wrong, they don't have anything to worry about, right? I think while they continue to enforce unjust laws like recreational drug laws, a reasonable defence by citizens is this kind of cop-watching.
Only cars that sit in one spot and don't move can be tracked, like SPEED TRAPS.
Cars that are on patrol are moving, and obviously can't be tracked so easily.
Duh.
Welcome to the 21st century where EVERYONE is tracked. If you don't like it ... too bad.
This statement is just terrible.
Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, said his members had concerns as well. 'I can think of 100 ways that it could present an officer-safety issue,' Pasco said. 'There's no control over who uses it. So, if you're a criminal and you want to rob a bank, hypothetically, you use your Waze.'"
The executive director of the FOP thinks we are all idiots. Police are in the PUBLIC, you don't need to know where some of them are right now if you had a plan to do harm to one of them. Do they feel they are only safe because nobody knows where they are? Do they actually think no one knows where they are? Hiding behind a billboard or in a cut on a road that they know statistically a lot of cars exceed the speed limit is not hiding from any type of threat.
Mt Pasco, do you want to reduce bank robberies? Hang out in the shopping center parking lots in plain site as a presence instead of behind those trees in the median of the highway. In my county, various 7-Eleven stores provide a small back room for police to hang out and do paperwork, kind of like a small remote office. It was "marketed" and publicized as a great way for the police to be seen in the wee hours of the night. I agree with that concept. If being out in the public and being seen was considered a good thing, how can it be a bad thing and a threat to the police as well?
These guys are SO FAR out of touch with reality with their purpose and duties. Starting with the executive director of the FOP. It goes down hill from there.
...as I drive off laughing this is what I'll say.... fuck the police... fuck the police
You want to spy on us in secret, welcome to the same fucking microscope assholes, hope you enjoy it!
... the responsibility of the public to make the job of the government easier.
Was only marks STOPPED police cars, that are also by the side of the road with someone in them. You (the person using Waze) wouldn't mark a cop parked to eat lunch, or just driving around (how could you mark a car driving around? It's not like Waze is selling GPS tracking magnets... hmm...)
So for someone thinking of robbing a bank or anyone else, all you know is where the police cars are that are in speed traps. At any given moment there are a ton of police cara simply driving all about, that Waze has no indication.
Using Waze does not mean you can speed like crazy, just that you can keep up with traffic without worrying about being singled out for a stop because of the color of your car or yourself.
Waze is also REALLY useful to know when there's traffic ahead (people telling Waze where traffic is beats every other mapping solution I have used) and also hazards like giant potholes, or cars stuck in the road.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Perhaps if they were being arbitrarily searched without warrants and having their cash seized without any justification they would feel more like the rest of us.
Go to a peaceful protest somewhere, something anti-government. Go up to random cops and just try to strike up conversation. Sure, some cops are cool and some people appear to ask for trouble. At the same time, you will find a tremendous amount of unfriendly and unprofessional cops.
The best experiment I ever saw was of ex cops trying to ask for complaint forms at police stations. Yeah, now that's a good time to be had for sure.
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
Couldn't the police run Waze and simply tap "not there" when Waze shows a reported police location?
If the police are truly worried about being stalked and targeted, why do they continue to re-use the same speed trap locations over and over? Why would they repeatedly back their cruiser up against a thickly wooded area with their back facing the thickly wooded area? And park in the exact same spot week after week...
Go fuck yourselves. Here, use this coke can
Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, said his members had concerns as well. 'I can think of 100 ways that it could present an officer-safety issue,' Pasco said. 'There's no control over who uses it. So, if you're a criminal and you want to rob a bank, hypothetically, you use your Waze.'"
SHUT THE FUCK UP you arrogant smug fucking prick.
If that's seriously the argument they're presenting, they need to accept that they DON'T have an argument against this wonderful piece of technology.
Why would making their location known place them in any danger?
Think about it!
Why are they afraid of people knowing where they are?
Are they afraid citizens might attack them? Kill them?
Gosh oh golly gee! Why in the world might they want to do that do you suppose?
</sarcasm>
Fuck 'em.
If they behaved more like good guys instead of the trigger-happy murderous shit-kicking-if-you-look-at-or-talk-to-them-sideways pricks that they are then there would be no reason for anyone to want to harm them.
They brought this situation on themselves.
Fuck 'em.
Twice (with a sharp stick).
They made their bed.
Now let them sleep in it.
From the cited article:
>> “There’s no expectation of privacy” for a vehicle driving on a public road or parked in a public place, said Lt. Bill Hedgpeth, a spokesman for the Mesquite Police Department in Texas.
http://washington.cbslocal.com...
Man that must be a real bitch for them.
I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
And what does your self driving car do when a chunk of debris from the road takes out a brake line? How does the self driving bus decide which obstacle to hit when there's insufficient emergency braking distance?
I'll take speeding assholes any day over the failures introduced because someone "didn't anticipate this scenario during programming."
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Just make it illegal to use Waze to commit a crime.
There. Problem solved.
"I believe in Karma. That means I can do bad things to people all day long and I assume they deserve it." : Dogbert
That is all.
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I didn't realize things are getting so bad in the US that merely knowing the location of a traffic cop puts their life in danger.
I wouldn't even expect that to be the case in most third world countries.
That sounds like some Mad Max shit.
No wonder they're acquiring all that surplus military equipment.
Here is a little scenario. An officer stops on the side of the road, and waits until that location gets marked on waze. Then he moves to another street and waits to get marked again, and again. Now the map looks like the police are all over the place. Properly played waze is a force multiplier. If waze were to simply change the marking algorithm so that marking an officer took one user event, but removing it took several, then the police would have the kind of visual presence on the map that would serve their better interest. People in those areas will slow down, and no you won't know which is current and which is merely recent.
Just play with their psychie ... instead of showing "policeman lurking in the roadside to harass you", just make it "Want to honor policeman, a great opportunity waits at this roadside".
Cops put their own lives at risk due to their behavior. Bunch of thugs with badges and guns. I feel more sympathy for someone when they drop their ice cream sandwich on the floor than when a cop dies. Speed traps have nothing to do with safety. Speed traps are purely revenue generators.
If police feel they are under threat by being identified, then why the heck are in they in clearly marked cars, wearing recognizable uniforms? I mean, if you're going to say knowing where you guys are is a problem then lets go all the way, get into normal cars and wear normal clothes.
Or you know, you could try not treating most of the population like lesser people than yourselves and show a little respect for people occasionally. I'm getting really tired of Law Enforcement's "we're better than the civilians" attitude.
Can't Waze just change the icon to a crispy bacon strip to obfuscate things? Average driver will still know what's up and the fuzz none the wiser?
Never used it before, now I know how to check which doughnut shops to avoid so I don't come back empty handed.
and just look for the cunts in dark blue uniforms with open-carry holsters. They'll be cops.
Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
I know they are a bit slow but eventually one of them will realise that they can flood the app with fake location data to degrade it's value.
Should it also report the location of schoolboys and schoolgirls? We should drive carefully around them, and give them any spare candy that we might have.
they have nothing to fear. Or wasn't that the theory they always try to feed us?
Let me get this straight.
Cops have guns, shotguns, assault rifles, armored tanks, armed robots, tasers, pepper sprays, billy clubs, body armor, police shocks, police engines, police cars, police radios, helicopters, and the power of law behind them.
But they are afraid of an app.
Sig for hire.
These jackass cops think they can just set up anywhere and demand your papers for doing nothing wrong.
Fuck them, and fuck the supreme court. That shit's ILLEGAL and UNCONSTITUTIONAL on principle.
Fuck you all and your lobbyists and pissant national organizations destroying the rights of people.
The fact that we cannot marry young girls and that this is a feminist police state is what makes men disregard the law.
1870s is when marrying a 9 year old was banned in the northern states.
It took alot longer for it to be banned in the south.
If you're out to randomly murder cops, do you dick around with some driving directions app, or do you just look for the nearest distinctively liveried car with red and blue lights on the roof and the word POLICE all over it?
Wow, that app must be exactly like Harry Potter's marauders map! Cops automatically appear on the map, no matter what. All cops too. Not just the ones reported by people in speed traps.
I hope the terrorist don't get a hold of this!
Add a function to track the google employee's and see how fast the feature will be removed.. ofcourse it's ridiculous to add police positions to such a tool.. Developers really should start thinking before adding stuff like that, you think developers would be smarter than that........
The Romans had a saying: "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?" -- "who watches the watchmen?"
You've got a pretty high UID to be quoting sayings from so long ago. Did you only sign up when you were like 1700 years old or something?
Waze is an annoying app and only use it for that feature. Not better than Navigator or G maps, except for avoiding the revenue generating radar traps.
I agree that this is free speech, and that police should not only be okay with people reporting on their location, but should be *required* to report their location publicly, constantly.
But that's not what this post is about. Others are saying "maybe if police didn't abuse their power, people wouldn't want to circumvent police and speed traps"
To take the opposite approach: maybe if speed limits were not only sane, but actually *enforced*, people wouldn't care so much about speed traps.
Speeds traps being a thing is really a sign that something is fundamentally wrong. Speeding should not be a thing which everyone does, unless there's a speed trap. Speeding should be a thing which, when it happens, everyone on the road reports the speeder, because they are creating a dangerous situation (just as you might call the police to report a chemical truck on fire).
If we live in a world where a law exists that *only police care about*, that's a problem.
-- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
I know there's a thin line between traffic control and BS speed traps for corrupt municipalities, but without the threat of getting caught, speed limits are pointless.
As my hillbilly cohort says "you're old enough that your wants won't hurt you", sometimes followed by "and people in hell want ice water.".
Frankly, if they've got nothing to hide, they have nothing to fear, right? Sounds kind of familiar.
I am 100% for watching the watchers.
I think that would resolve the problem :)
Beating Waze is easy. Don't camp in one place.
Keep moving.
that's my motto!
I figured out in my early 20s that nothing good can come from interacting w/a cop - the BEST case scenario is you have your time wasted and they go downhill in a hurry from there! it's like a reverse lottery ticket - odds are nothing w/come from it (other than wasting your time) but there's still that 1/n chance you end up the next Tim Masters, Cameron Willingham, etc. if a mobile app helps me shrink that numerator to 0 & that results in a revenue drop to a few boss hoggs then tfs!!!
& if _I_ feel this was as a lexus owning, married w/kids, upscale suburban, borderline 1% 40-something wasp they (cops) are seriously underestimating their pr problem...
I think we should drop license plate requirements. I mean seriously driving around with a big personal identifier on my vehicle puts the lives of me and my family at risk. It makes it trivial for stalkers to track me. They can tell what place of business I am at just by observing my car is in the lot.
Some information is public. It just is the cops are all to happy to argue you have not fourth amendment protection against them setting up cameras all over town with OCR to recognize plates and compiling a big database that essentially knows where you are at all times. That's no problem I mean anyone can see your vehicle out in public view right and anyone could compile such information? sure..
As soon as the public does something remotely similar, but decidedly less intrusive in that it does not track specific cops. OMG its a problem won't somebody please think of these brave officers we are putting at risk!
Fuck that! If I have to be watched all the time so do they!
Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
When the CB radio craze was on. There are a hundred technologies that will cause the same problems for police. Move on.
in the spirit of banning wazeas the new "police stalker" app, I also call for banning cars, I think they are "motorized murder machines" allowing criminals to run over and kill groups of people at will.
but not at all where they are. This is a non-issue that just makes the USNSA look like under-informed tools. But, by all means! Keep protesting this!
In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
I understand cops ideally need to be parked somewhere to monitor traffic, but rush hour makes up a limited part of their day. And even then they can alter their location periodically to foil both stalkers and people hoping to avoid the upcoming speed traps.
It's not like, "But my app said you were further up the road," is going to get anyone out of a ticket. And all the invalid police location entries will keep the Waze users slowed down more than it would have if the cop stayed put because there's now a larger area they might get busted in.
Seems to me, the reason we have marked police cars is that part of their crime prevention strategy is to maintain a high degree of visibility. Were this not the case, all cars would be unmarked. This app then simply expands that visibility so you can know that big brother's little brother is watching. I am assuming most unmarked cars will not show up in this app, so that tool is still available to law enforcement. Plus, as a criminal, are you really going to trust the cell-phone-wielding masses to catch them all?
If the cop is actually doing his job and is on patrol or rushing to a bank robbery, you CANNOT report the position of the police officer because they are moving. Waze can ONLY report stationary police cars.
If someone wants to ambush or target a policeman, all they have to do is call in an emergency. Since waze can't report moving police, the part about robbing a bank is fear mongering, and flatly false.
OTOH, if the policeman has made a traffic stop, I want to know that so I can move a lane over and slow down (even if nothing more than avoiding a ticket). If someone is getting arrested and running around, I want to know about where that is even more. MANY times more cops die from being hit by a car during traffic stops than have ever been killed by terrorists or lone lunatics. Do a search on youtube and you will find many dozens of videos of near misses and a few hits.
Cops will be marked as a traffic hazard (cars on side of road) instead of specifically a speed trap.
People will come up with some oddball hazard to indicate speed traps and get around google, just like cb lingo - smokeys, bears, local yokels, etc.
I used Waze (recently uninstalled), and I can tell you that 1 out of 100 times a cop was actually where a cop was reported. I figured that some cop somewhere was flagging a cop where there was not one (like a smokescreen)... I spent more time pushing the "thumbs down" on those reports that were not valid any more. It got to the point I could not see the route because of all the icons on the screen (and I was not looking at the road like I should).
Google navigator does fine without the "glitter", and my friends do not need to know where I am going.
Truckers have been calling out where smokey bear is for decades, but this fear monger doesn't seem to be worried about fundamentalist muslim truckers sneaking up and killing cops...
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I support our local constabulary. Hell, I've generously donated to them on more than one occasion during my mid-life crisis. But I think this response is unnecessary.
My impression of the 'police stalker' is entirely the opposite. I think it's a 'police protector.'
When I'm traveling somewhere and see patrol car lights ahead, I slow down and move over, if possible, to give them more room. I'm sick and tired of hearing about self-involved, inattentive drivers who plow right into a policeman/sheriff during a traffic stop.
Give these officers a break. Slow down and, if possible, move over. Give them room to do their already scary dangerous job.
Perhaps another perspective on this is it might motivate the officers to be more attentive. Pay attention to your surroundings.
I also have to wonder if there isn't a way to manage the obviousness of their presence. There are places on the interstate where everybody adjusts speed and changes lanes because they are so familiar with a patrol car being there. I certainly don't need Waze there. So what are the options re new locations or unmarked vehicles?
Personally, I don't use it. I've nearly deleted it several times already and after this discussion, I'll consider dumping it again. I thought it would give me some useful info while our interstate gets a major 5-year overhaul. It just hasn't turned out to be useful. I've ref'd to it on several of our trips, but didn't see anything I didn't already know or expect.
Finally, if the US National Sheriffs' Association is so uncomfortable with this, then do some work internally so you prevent poorly adjusted individuals from becoming officers just because they can carry a weapon and intimidate people and assert some sort of manly image for themselves. Then your public image might improve and you won't feel as persecuted as you probably feel now.
I know they go through some evals, but (IMHO, IANAL, AFAIK) several of these terrible tragedies were on the officer for not following protocol. There is room for improvement and I certainly understand the demands put upon them by society. They are extreme. But, in the final analysis, you, the US National Sheriffs' Association, is responsible for how society in general responds to your actions.
Personally, I think if someone wants to target police officers, they'll always find a way. People like that are already motivated by hate towards authority figures.
An effective "democracy" creates the illusion the people have a say in their government.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Waze sells its driving data, which includes driver speed. Even if it's aggregated or anonymized, it would tell the police exactly where drivers are speeding (within 50 feet!) and at precisely what time of day.
"Deputy Fife, I just got the Waze history download. Set up speed radar at 10:03 AM at 980 Main Street, then at 11:19 move over to 833 Orchard Avenue". Force multiplication.
As if sitting in a car with "Police" emblazoned on the side doesn't let bad guys know where the cops are.
I have no doubt that police officers who object to the cop-reporting feature of Waze are sincere in their belief that traffic cops are being put in danger by people reporting the whereabouts of said traffic cops, but that doesn’t mean that such fears are in any way reasonable.
In sum, this is not about “risk management.” It’s about “fear management.” It’s not like Waze is publishing the home addresses of police officers. And if a *UNIFORMED* traffic officer who is on duty is afraid of a *DANGEROUS* criminal knowing where he or she is, then he or she shouldn’t be carrying a badge.
Deterrence is the most effective form of policing, which is the primary reason why so many police are put in clearly identifiable uniforms and in clearly marked vehicles. Other than being able to catch a traffic offender unaware, why would any uniformed police officer want to hide? If anything, Waze makes the job of policing easier, as it makes police more visible and (thus) more of a deterrent to bad behavior.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Take a cold, hard look at some of the shit US National Sheriffs' Association does, and you'll have a difficult time sleeping at night.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Brown called the app a 'police stalker,' and said being able to identify where officers were located could put them at personal risk
Am I missing something here?
Criminal types could use it to find police?
Really?
Because it's so hard to find police otherwise?
I can think of ways to locate police from simply reporting suspicious activity at a location to... oh, Im thinking of ways far faster than I'll be able to write them down, and won't bore anyone, however:
Crowdsourced information on an app (that anyone including the police themselves can feed with misinformation if they like) doesn't seem like my "go-to" resource if I'm some sociopathic cop killer.... (assuming to be a cop killer you'd be sociopathic, but the same applies to the non sociopathic wanna be cop killers if they're out there too)
"lt;dr" is the correct response to most of my posts.
This could almost be modded informative, despite the malice in it, but I'd be interested in some references for the statistics.
Just really how many Police Officers die as compared to other professions (and probably need to sub-categorise the police, so we're just looking at beat-walkers and response units here, not including undercover or other higher risk categories, or the desk-bound low risk categories)
I mean I know there's more to it that simply the statistic: cops and garbage men are equal in my opinion, they both provide a service to the community, however Police do have a little more training and equipment to help them to stay alive, that goes hand in hand with the increased power and responsibility
"lt;dr" is the correct response to most of my posts.
The black panthers actually stalked police with armed patrols no less. That was totally legal. They only are asking because they cant make Google do anything. I think we should bring back armed police stalking. At least until the abuse ends.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Hampton
So characterizing this as a "stalking app" sounds like a huge overreach. Could individual officers not drop off the tracking radar when actually necessary? As when they are undercover or staking out a scene or person?
Mild understatement of the year right there. This is a traffic app where users can report a stationary police officer (speed trap, accident scene, etc.) to make other users aware of the police presence. I'm sure it does cause some speeders to slow down near speed traps when they would otherwise get caught. However, it also causes people to slow down around accidents and just generally be more aware of hazards around them while driving.
Waze has no ability to track individual officers, or do any sort of realtime tracking of police. The app does a decent job (being crowd-sourced, it's only as good as its input) of alerting drivers to police cars stopped on or near roadways, and that's it.
Federal government's Bureau of Labor Statistics maintains really good numbers on relative number of deaths in various occupations. You can find the latest numbers here: http://www.bls.gov/iif/oshcfoi...
The FBI also releases a detailed report of pigs killed every year. You can find it listed as "Law Enforcment Officers Killed and Assaulted" as part of the annual Uniform Crime Reports program. It's on the FBI website.
And the malice comes from experience.
Back in the 80's I had a radar detector. It was very useful to have a warning that everyone ahead of you is going to slam their brakes on.
I agree with the police that knowing where the traps are is a safety issue.
Perhaps Waze can create a road hazard icon that isn't "COP!", but something more generic and isn't used for something else. The cop spotters might start using it & those in the know will know what it means. Like people saying grass, weed, 420, hash, etc.
They missed the most obvious target. You can usually find police at a police station. No Waze required. Also, they are often found at Donut shops.