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Tenants Outraged Over New York Landlord's Plan To Install Facial Recognition Technology (gothamist.com)

A Brooklyn landlord plans to install facial recognition technology at the entrance of a 700-unit building, according to Gothamist, "raising alarm among tenants and housing rights attorneys about what they say is a far-reaching and egregious form of digital surveillance." [Last] Sunday, several tenants told Gothamist that, unbeknownst to them, their landlord, Nelson Management, had sought state approval in July 2018 to install a facial recognition system known as StoneLock. Under state rules, landlords of rent-regulated apartments built before 1974 must seek permission from the state's Homes and Community Renewal (HCR) for any "modification in service." Tenants at the two buildings, located at 249 Thomas S. Boyland Street and 216 Rockaway Avenue, said they began receiving notices about the system in the fall. According to its website, Kansas-based company StoneLock offers a "frictionless" entry system that collects biometric data based on facial features. "We don't want to be tracked," said Icemae Downes, a longtime tenant. "We are not animals. This is like tagging us through our faces because they can't implant us with a chip."

It is not clear how many New York City apartments are using facial scanning software or how such technology is being regulated. But in a sign of the times, the city's Department of Housing Preservation and Development last June began marketing 107 affordable units at a new apartment complex in the South Bronx. Among the amenities listed was "State of the Art Facial Recognition Building Access...." Across the real estate industry, New York City landlords have increasingly been moving to keyless entry systems, citing convenience as well as a desire to offer enhanced security. Over the years, in response to appeals filed by tenants, HCR has ruled in favor of key fob and card entry systems, saying that such substitutions did not violate rent-stabilization and rent-control laws. But the latest technology has triggered even more concerns about the ethics of data collection....

Last month, the management company reached out to a group of tenants to assuage their concerns about StoneLock. But tenants said the presentation, if anything, only deepened their fears that they were being asked to submit to a technology that had very little research behind it.

"This was not something we asked for at any given time," one tenant complaint, while one of the attorneys representing the tenants said that, among other things, their landlord had "made no assurances to protect the data from being accessed by NYPD, ICE, or any other city, state, or federal agency."

"Citing concerns over the potential for privacy and civil liberties violations, tenants at Brownsville's Atlantic Plaza Towers filed an objection to the plan in January..."

281 comments

  1. What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is for your safety citizen.

    1. Re:What have you got to hide? by arbiter1 · · Score: 0

      yea maybe cause they don't want landlord to know how many people are living in said apartment or who is coming and going to said apartment. With a keycard/keyfob you they don't know who has it or used it just that it was used. They could instead of using facial software just put a camera at the entrance that imposes who the card/fob is linked to apartment wise. Which would be the same thing as facial software.

    2. Re:What have you got to hide? by Mattcelt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As long as you're not violating occupancy laws, your landlord has absolutely no right to know who, what, or when people or things are going to or from your flat.

      The United States desperately needs an information ownership law that revises the existing "you collect it, you own it" data practises. If companies can't sell data about you, they won't bother to collect it.

    3. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get over it. Life happens

    4. Re:What have you got to hide? by guruevi · · Score: 2, Informative

      Exactly - as long as you're not violating laws. Subleasing, AirBnB etc is a real problem for landlords and rent controlled is already scraping the bottom of the barrel of both tenants and landlord profits.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    5. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >As long as you're not violating occupancy laws, your landlord has absolutely no right to know who, what, or when people or things are going to or from your flat.

      That depends on the terms of your lease. But generally speaking, the property management company has the right to know who, what, or when non-tenants are on the property particularly if entry to property requires authorization or an escort from a tenant. The pmc may be lax about enforcement, allowing people to freely come and go on the property, but they do have the right to know. If they choose to put a security system in place that logs peoples coming and goings, then they are legally allowed to that.

    6. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "but they do have the right to know." = Not really. Tenants have an expectation of privacy within reasonable limits. Keeping the identities of all visitors indefinitely creates a privacy hazard that does not actually improve safety.

      If they deleted the records annually and protected the information exclusively for law enforcement in warrant/investigation type procedures, that would be different from what this is currently - a data mining operation for ANY purpose.

      There are unlitigated issues here that will 100% assuredly be fought in court. If that's what the property management company wants to spend money on, one has to question the benefit these systems give them to justify it.

      Does just living in the apartment give them the right to sell your list of visitors online, for a single example? Even if they put that in the contract boilerplate it would be illegal in most states. You're being simplistic.

      The law is not clear, your statement is of undetermined veracity.

    7. Re:What have you got to hide? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      If companies can't sell data about you, they won't bother to collect it.

      Not true. Most of the data collected is not sold. It is used directly by the companies collecting it.

      Google does not sell data. They use the data to place ads on behalf of their clients. They do not give the clients access to the data.

    8. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't know shit. Your landlord can't prevent you from having guests.

    9. Re:What have you got to hide? by youngone · · Score: 1

      But generally speaking, the property management company has the right to know who, what, or when non-tenants are on the property...

      Not where I live they don't. The property manager will tell you they have all sorts of rights, but they are usually lying.

    10. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      flat

      In the States we call them apartments, or if you're rich then it's a Condo.
      Regardless, large buildings normally already have security cameras on the common areas. And it's funny that someone from the Land of Cameras would take issue with them.

    11. Re:What have you got to hide? by jpaine619 · · Score: 1

      yea maybe cause they don't want landlord to know how many people are living in said apartment or who is coming and going to said apartment. With a keycard/keyfob you they don't know who has it or used it just that it was used. They could instead of using facial software just put a camera at the entrance that imposes who the card/fob is linked to apartment wise. Which would be the same thing as facial software.

      You're right! It can't be that they simply don't like the idea of a fucking computer tracking their every goddamn departure and arrival.. They MUST be up to no good.

      YOU ARE A FUCKING STATIST.

    12. Re:What have you got to hide? by vlad30 · · Score: 2

      real example Unit is rented out then the renter subleases to a number of students so many that they simply have mattresses wall to wall and sleep in shifts. As there are too many to use the bathroom in the unit they use the common area facilities when they finally are removed after the lease is cancelled the cleanup is very costly not just to the unit owner but the owners coop. as many units around that unit invariably have pest problems and the facilities are used by far too many people who share the limited keycards keys and fobs. this was 20 years ago and only got worse once airbnb etc started.

      --
      Your'e all thinking it, I just said it for you
    13. Re:What have you got to hide? by jpaine619 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The lease states who is allowed to use the unit. Landlords are allowed to enforce those clauses. Anyone not on the lease is trespassing on the landlord's property.

      BULLSHIT

      Your landlord has no legal right to know who you have over for dinner. He/She has no legal right to know who you brought home to fuck last night. He/She has no legal right to know who you asked to swing by your apartment to pick up your dry cleaning.

      Nearly every state in the union has codified the concept of "Quiet Enjoyment" and tenants are entitled to a certain level of privacy.

      When you lease/rent a property to another person you surrender a certain level of control over it IN EXCHANGE FOR MONEY

      If you want to maintain state-level surveillance and dictatorial control over your property, then don't fucking lease it.

    14. Re: What have you got to hide? by jpaine619 · · Score: 1

      It's an apartment if you rent/lease it. It's a Condo if you own it. What the hell does being rich have to do with anything?

    15. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " The lease states who is allowed to use the unit. Landlords are allowed to enforce those clauses " - Within legal limits, moron. That includes privacy considerations vs. harassment and a lot of variable local stuff too.

      You're an idiot and if you tried that you would be sued to oblivion. There's 2 types of landlords, bad landlords and smart landlords. You're not that smart, so that narrows it down considerably.

      "the unit may not be used for any illegal activity" - Does not help you at all. Any such bullshit clauses in a lease are easily stripped out by any competent attorney. You have no idea lol.

    16. Re: What have you got to hide? by magzteel · · Score: 1

      It's an apartment if you rent/lease it. It's a Condo if you own it. What the hell does being rich have to do with anything?

      Apartment describes a type of dwelling, not a type of ownership.
      Condominium and co-op are types of ownership

    17. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The law is not clear, your statement is of undetermined veracity.

      A 5 minute search will inform you of the law in your area of the US. My statement is true generally speaking.

    18. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Renters rights only covers renters, not their guests. You've got the right to invite a guest into your rented dwelling, but the property manager may have restrictions about where your guest goes outside your area. However, if a guest breaks the rules stipulated in the rental agreement, you will be held responsible for their actions. They maybe banned from ever coming onto the property again.

    19. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They use it to sell ads... so they sell it without handing it over?

    20. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the story is about NYC, apartment implies rental. This is a language used in that particular city.

    21. Re:What have you got to hide? by kenh · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As long as you're not violating occupancy laws, your landlord has absolutely no right to know who, what, or when people or things are going to or from your flat.

      Of course, like nearly every other poster below, you ignored the fact that this is installed in the building entrances, not on every apartment entrance.

      The landlord has an interest in knowing who enters the building, especially if the apartment is rent-subsidized, and the recipient never enters the building.

      --
      Ken
    22. Re:What have you got to hide? by kenh · · Score: 0

      Your landlord has no legal right to know who you have over for dinner.

      Who said they did?

      Installing facial recognition in the lobby doesn't tell the landlord who's visiting your apartment, it tells them who is on their property. They probably have a legal right to know that.

      --
      Ken
    23. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your example carries no weight at all.

      There are worst case scenarios for everything, you brought up one weak sauce example to justify surveillance and tracking of fellow Humans.

      What an Asshole you are.

    24. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your landlord has no legal right to know who you have over for dinner. He/She has no legal right to know who you brought home to fuck last night. He/She has no legal right to know who you asked to swing by your apartment to pick up your dry cleaning.

      Presumably there is no turnstile, so as long as the tenant is there to let the guest in, there is no difference. If the system could provably not log any activity, simply query, decide, then throw away the scan, I'd be ok with it. This isn't about identifying people, it's about access control.

    25. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your landlord has no legal right to know who you have over for dinner.

      Who said they did?

      Installing facial recognition in the lobby doesn't tell the landlord who's visiting your apartment, it tells them who is on their property. They probably have a legal right to know that.

      Sure, just like your ISP has a legal right to know your banking information and passwords if you buy anything over the internet. Your packets are passing through their property after all.

    26. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dont like it? Dont live there. You can have it both ways... I'm a landlord. I believe in private property and the american way of life. When your name is on the title of a property you may feel different. You might come to feel that letting your tenants do shit like painting every room black, running a grow-op or have "guests" that stay for 1-12 months at a time, may not be such a great idea. You should grow up consider your stance on things and stop calling people that don't agree with your I'll conceived notions names

    27. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No? It's not a sale?

    28. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The landlord has an interest in knowing who enters the building" - Maybe, but not an inherent blanket right to violate their privacy to do so. You're a moron, you have no idea what you're blathering about.

    29. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's NOT STATIST it's what a LIBERTARIAN PARADISE is : endless corporate surveillance everywhere.

    30. Re:What have you got to hide? by arbiter1 · · Score: 1

      ""but they do have the right to know." = Not really. Tenants have an expectation of privacy within reasonable limits. Keeping the identities of all visitors indefinitely creates a privacy hazard that does not actually improve safety." How doesn't it improve safety when people know that if they enter that building their identity is register with a video, so if something happens they have facial data of everyone in the building at the time. That would mean anyone looking to cause harm will likely GO somewhere else that doesn't have facial recognition at entry. What you are saying is a Bank would be less likely to be robbed if they had NO camera's in it. As for Privacy, the tenants only really have that reasonable limit within THE apartment they have rented, entry to said building and hall wall up to the front door of said apartment is lack of a better term Public Area which you have no reasonable expectation of privacy from the person that owns the building.

    31. Re:What have you got to hide? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      This is from a typical lease agreement:

      > The Lessee shall not assign nor underlet any part of the whole of the leased premises, nor shall permit the leased premises
      to be occupied for a period longer than a temporary visit by anyone except the individuals specifically named in the first
      paragraph of this lease.

      Part of the problem is "rent-stabilized" housing is additional tenants who are not on the lease, using parking and utilities, and sometimes creating hazards for other residents.

    32. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, just like your ISP has a legal right to know your banking information and passwords if you buy anything over the internet.

      Of course they don't.

      But your bank does have the right - indeed, the responsibility - to verify your identify when you want to authorize a payment deducting money from your account at said bank.

      Your packets are passing through their property after all.

      Your analogies are lacking.

    33. Re: What have you got to hide? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      Don't like it? Sue the landlord into oblivion, bonus points if you make them lose their properties and jump in front of a train.

    34. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it was never explicitly stated that the statement works, just that is why it is there. In fact, the entire remainder of the post seems to back your thesis that the statement does not actually work.

    35. Re:What have you got to hide? by Targon · · Score: 1

      Occupancy laws, including people who get a rent controlled apartment and then rent it out to others for more money than they pay? When talking about 700 units and rent controlled apartments, there has been a big problem where people move out and then rent to other people to "keep" the lower rent. The problem is that the fair rent would be three or more times higher than what the tenant has been paying. Passing a rent controlled apartment from person to person actually goes against the rent control laws.

      There doesn't need to be any log kept of when a person comes and goes as well. As a positive thing, again with rent control in mind, the process of updating the facial recognition system to allow residents in would also keep things fair. You should never be allowed to pass on a rent controlled apartment to others, unless they are the children of listed residents.

    36. Re:What have you got to hide? by Targon · · Score: 1

      The big problem comes from rent control, and people abusing that system. Your parents get into a rent controlled apartment, they die and because you have lived there, it is now yours, but paying what your parents had paid for rent, which may be only 1/10 the going price. You have a good job, you live somewhere else, so you now rent that apartment out to other people who are paying you and not the actual building owner. So you make a profit on a rent controlled apartment that you don't even live in. That isn't fair in the slightest.

      People abusing rent control is why building owners want to clamp down on the people living in these buildings. I am not talking about people who come over here or there, but people who now are moving into the building as their home, but are not on the lease and if something happens, there are no records to show that the person even lives there.

    37. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope that next time the stock market tanks it sets you up to live the poor life.
      Some dude wanting a cup of your pee from time to time, landlord has an electronic video archive of every person who you have let in your home in the past 4 years but he won't fix your sink without a letter from an attorney. If you leave your home at night you can expect that the police might pull you over to ask why.

      It's perfectly reasonable that the rest of society keep an eye on guys like you.

    38. Re:What have you got to hide? by Altus · · Score: 1

      Keeping the information from law enforcement makes the whole system useless. If you find that your Tennant is violating the lease, subletting illegally, over occupying the property or what have you then you need to go to the police to have them evicted. The police will want evidence and the system provides that. This is almost certainly the exact use case the landlord has for installing the system, monitoring access to their property.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    39. Re: What have you got to hide? by Altus · · Score: 1

      Landlords can absolutely place restrictions on guests, particularly overnight guests. Many standard leases limit the amount of time any guest may stay including no overnight guests. While no guests at all might not hold up the landlord has huge leeway to restrict guests staying on the premises and can restrict areas that they have access to outside of your apartment (any common areas in the building). Further, a landlord my also bar a particular guest from the premises if the guest violates any of the rules of the building or the law.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    40. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      subleases to a number of students

      You misspelled pop-up crack house.

    41. Re:What have you got to hide? by kenh · · Score: 1

      You apparently missed the very first line of The Fine Summary - I quote:

      A Brooklyn landlord plans to install facial recognition technology at the entrance of a 700-unit building

      How, exactly, will the landlord connect anyone that walks in the entrance of the 700 unit building with a particular apartment?

      --
      Ken
    42. Re:What have you got to hide? by kenh · · Score: 1

      As noted in the very first line of The Fine Summary - I quote:

      A Brooklyn landlord plans to install facial recognition technology at the entrance of a 700-unit building

      They aren't interested in who's going in which apartment, they are identifying who is on the property, who passed through the entrance .

      --
      Ken
    43. Re:What have you got to hide? by Targon · · Score: 1

      Are you familiar with the purpose of rent controlled apartments? Is it to keep down the rent for people who continue to live in the same place for a long period of time, or just to give an increasing break to people the legal resident decides to rent the apartment to?

      If you live anywhere near a large city like New York, you know that crime will ALWAYS be a concern, and making sure that only people who live there can provide access. If you live in a rent controlled apartment, then decide to move out, what stops you from renting that apartment to others at a profit? That is why it isn't a horrible idea to check who is actually living in an apartment, and that does NOT mean that your activities are being monitored, just making sure that those who are entering are either living there, or are being brought in by those who do live there.

    44. Re:What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your brain is lacking. The relationship a person has to a bank is irrelevant in this situation.

      This is a real-world MITM attack against privacy. A landlord does not have the right to know everyone that goes into your apartment and when. Moving that lack of ability to the lobby in an attempt to thwart the legal right to privacy is a pathetic attempt at petty tyranny. Anyone supporting it or defending it is, at best, a modern version of a brown shirt.

      The end.

    45. Re:What have you got to hide? by Mattcelt · · Score: 1

      As long as the tenants have another way to enter and exit the building without being surveilled, then the landlord is welcome to put the system in.

      If the system covers every entrance and exit, then there is absolutely no practical difference than surveilling them at the entrance to their own flats.

      But if it doesn't cover every entrance and exit, then it's hardly worth installing, as anyone they would ostensibly want to profile (AirBnB-ers, sub-lessees, etc.) would be using the un-monitored entrance.

    46. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Repubtards use to stand up to personal freedoms. Now they just let the govt
      Shit all over them while trying to restrict other people's freedoms.

      My how the tables have Turned.

    47. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They sell the ads, they are selling your data in the form of ads.

      Repubtard used to be the party of personal freedom. Now they just suck government cock and try to tell everyone else what to do, all while screaming mahhhh rights.

      Fucking pitiful.

    48. Re: What have you got to hide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is your third post about rent controlled apartments. Jesus Christ if it's that bad then create a fucking law.
      Jesus Christ.

    49. Re: What have you got to hide? by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Breaking the terms of your rental agreement is not a personal freedom, FYI.

    50. Re:What have you got to hide? by torkus · · Score: 1

      Your right to privacy doesn't extend to breaking housing rules or laws. People seem to think privacy gives them this blanket right to hide illegal things and demand that everyone look the other way even when it's blatantly obvious what they're doing.

      As someone living in NYC and dealing with the situation created by things like AirBnB and illegal rentals/illegal rents/rent stabilization or control/subsidies/and so on I'll share some insight:

      First off, it's common for people to abuse low-income, subsidized, or stabilized rentals. Extremely common even. Some of that is borne of necessity - people living on a fixed income who simply cannot afford to live here and don't have any money (or ability for the elderly) to move. Much of it is greed though. NYC has 1/3 of the the entire countries low-income rental units. Many of those people AirBnB or sublet or similar to make substantial money (some low-income apartments literally go for under $100 a month vs. the $2-3000+ they'd rent for otherwise). Or you have planned communities of low-income people - not the city planning them, but whole communities who intentionally are low-income so and rig the system so they basically get all the apartments. Anyone who's gone through the jewish portion of williamsburg knows this. Amazing how their low-income apartment complexes are all jewish people (nothing against jewish people, but it's incredibly obvious they have taken over those buildings).

      The system is heavily abused, flawed, and any kind of correction becomes a huge fight of 'but mah privasy' while landlords following rental rules are trying to not support someone's illegal rental business on their backs. That's not to say there aren't plenty of scumbag landlords of course.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    51. Re:What have you got to hide? by torkus · · Score: 1

      You are entirely misinformed regarding the involvement of the police in tenant-landlord disputes.

      Police only get involved in immediate life-safety (violence, fire, flood, etc.) or criminal (trespass, theft, violence, etc) situations. The Sheriff's department handles evictions, but only after a final court order directing them to do so. They have ZERO to do with reviewing evidence and determining anything.

      If tenants stop paying rent, move in a few friends, AirBnB a couch or 5, and trash your apartment you have to take them to court. That's the ONLY legal means to evict them. Call the police all you want but there's basically nothing they can do unless they witness a crime or immediate life-safety issue.

      The underlying (but of course they can't admit) reason behind this system is to make it much more difficult to illegally rent, sublet, or AirBnB apartments while also collecting evidence to prove the misuse in court should people persist. People are (generally) crying about privacy to protect and perpetuate their illegal activities.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    52. Re:What have you got to hide? by torkus · · Score: 1

      Yup, but protections enacted to prevent abusive landlords went so far that it's nearly impossible to prevent abusive tenants.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
  2. New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll never understand why people worship NYC. I don't want to be within 500 miles of it, personally.

    1. Re: New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, NYC sucks. You have to be an utter idiot to want to live there.

    2. Re: New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ironically, red states are chock full of the idiots you just described...

    3. Re:New York by Kernel+Kurtz · · Score: 1

      I'll never understand why people worship NYC. I don't want to be within 500 miles of it, personally.

      Technology will make it's way to Birmingham soon enough.

    4. Re:New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I'd lived in Roman times, I'd have lived in Rome. Where else? Today America is the Roman Empire and New York is Rome itself

      - JL

    5. Re: New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Must suck having TDS, always needing to remind everyone you have it...

    6. Re:New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about the technology to identify the difference between it's and its
      nah
      gotta stay realistic

    7. Re: New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SHUT UP!!! I hate Trump and everyone who voted for him! I hate them I hate them I hate them!!!!

    8. Re: New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NYC before California any day of the year.

    9. Re:New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The king of hippies.

      I HATE HIPPIES.

    10. Re: New York by jpaine619 · · Score: 1

      Good comeback. Don't address the issue, just say "It's bad over there too!".. Asshole.

    11. Re:New York by Scarletdown · · Score: 1

      Cartman? Is that you?

      --
      This space unintentionally left blank.
    12. Re:New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean - corruption, hedonism, perversion , violence and imperialism?
      All in one nice New Rome/New York package?

  3. Of course it's insanity, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Of course it's insanity, but why start complaining *now*, when every idiot on the street and everywhere around you is carrying around a surveillance unit out of (supposed) "free" will? It's baffling to me how nothing whatsoever was done for so many decades and suddenly, there are people who get "outraged"? It doesn't make sense to me.

    1. Re:Of course it's insanity, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No kidding. I was under the impression that Manhattan was heavily covered with surveillance cameras and that Brooklyn was getting catching up. I'm guessing most of those systems can add FR technology to them. Why get upset now?

    2. Re:Of course it's insanity, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone carry a surveillance unit (phone) but they can turn it off when they don't want the telco tracking them. Being tracked is necessary in order to route calls to them - airplane mode is fine when you for some reason don't want that.

      A nice thing about phones is that you decide who tracks you. The telco is inevitable - unless you stick to ip-based comms only. (And in that case, wifi only) But then there will usually be someone else tracking you around. You may have google tracking you if you use their map service - if you don't like that, there are solutions for keeping the map on the phone and not use any 'server' when navigating. Many let facebook track them - but again, it is optional.

      And no matter how many phone-tracking systems in use - none of them lets landlords track who comes and goes. While google-bashing and facebook-bashing is popular, the standard for landlords is lower still. Not the kind of people I'd want tracking me. "You can leave that apartment, you associate with people I don't like . . ."

    3. Re:Of course it's insanity, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have absolutely no clue what you're talking about...

  4. To stop illegal subleases? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is the jig up?

    1. Re: To stop illegal subleases? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Subleases, tenants that have permanent guests, tenants that harbor criminals, etc, etc...

      These projects are inevitably overrun with illicit activity.

      I'm not in NYC, but in my city every report of gunfire and assault comes from the same neighborhoods dominated by medium/high density public housing projects. I know because I spent 3 years paying high rent for a city apartment that abutted a project. Project residents would sit out in their parking lot drinking from 30 packs and smoking all day long while yelling and carrying on.

      I remember hearing camera installers getting heckled as they put them up, the residents hated it... many were doing disability scams, suddenly a lot more canes and limps showed up. Even more were "single" moms who had a man coming/going as though he lived there.

      People say the police don't bother with these places which is why the crime rate is higher--as though crime magically happens everywhere if not for police activity--but at the same time you'll have a shooting out on a sidewalk at 5PM, surrounded by high density housing, and yet when cavasing for witness no one will claim to have seen anything...

      Camera, keys, gates, facial recognition, whatever it takes.

      If you're on the dole then the tax payers should get the say, not you.

    2. Re: To stop illegal subleases? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

      This is a private complex, you coward, not public housing. Even residents of public housing STILL have a God given right to privacy.

  5. Snape is still alive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He never appeared when Harry used the resurrection stone, and his body wasn't in the hall at the end of the battle for Hogwarts. He's alive for sure and out there somewhere.

  6. Vocabulary problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Was it a mistake for the English language to call the owner a "landlord"? Things are getting medieval.

    1. Re:Vocabulary problem by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Dark and lonely on the summer night.
      Kill my landlord, kill my landlord.
      Watchdog barking - Do he bite?
      Kill my landlord, kill my landlord.
      Slip in his window,
      Break his neck!
      Then his house
      I start to wreck!
      Got no reason --
      What the heck!
      Kill my landlord, kill my landlord.
      C-I-L-L ...
      My land - lord ...

      By: Tyrone Greene

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  7. Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by iamhassi · · Score: 0

    If this system is connected to NYPD, wouldn’t you want this if you are not a criminal? Maybe NYPD should run checks on the tenants complaining and see how many have warrants. I would sleep better knowing my neighbors are not rapists or murderers.

    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    1. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "wouldn’t you want this if you are not a criminal" = "Why not just allow cops to check your asshole on demand, assuming you don't have drugs up your ass?" = Fuck your reductive argument, there are more ramifications to consider here.

      Skipping over considering even a single one of them isn't actually advancing the debate, you're skipping weighing any cons entirely as if pretending there were none. That just says to me you haven't read a whole lot about dystopia.

      Don't be a mindless toady. We have an entire Republican party for that.
         

    2. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The landlord should publish the names, financial information, social security numbers, next of kin, and photos of those complainants.

    3. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who has access to the system? Does some administrator suddenly have information about when your sister comes to visit, or who you're dating? Personally, I want as little to do with my landlord as possible.

      If you think there is a question about safety, feel free to have the police on the street in front. Keep them out of my apartment though.

    4. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Who has access to the system?

      Obviously the private security company hired to monitor the already in place security cameras.

    5. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And thus, probably anyone with acces to shodan, given the track record of unsecured Amazon RING doorbell videos in an unsecured AWS bucket in Ukraine...

    6. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, think of the children!

    7. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If this system is connected to NYPD, wouldnâ(TM)t you want this if you are not a criminal?

      And there we have it ... you have nothing to fear if you have nothing to hide ... the battle cry of fascists and assholes everywhere.

      You may believe that dumb shit, but I assure you, almost none of your rights stand up in the face of that.

      You're literally asking for state surveillance of people coming and going from their homes, and for private companies to install it and feed the data to law enforcement.

      Nothing good can come from this kind of thing.

      I love how people are willing to give away the rights of other people to make themselves feel a little more secure.

      Fuck that, and fuck you. You don't keep your rights by giving up the ones you think you can do without.

    8. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is he a real idiot? Is it a troll?

    9. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...And then beg for the mercy of the court when they get sent to prison, to finish your retarded idiot's storytime how-to-be-landlord exercise... idiot.

    10. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by sjames · · Score: 1

      It actually sounds more than a little creepy.

    11. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. I see people deal dope right in front of police cams all the time and they don't get arrested. Not sure why or how.
      I also hear about people getting violated on probation after their PO finds out they've associated with a felon unknowingly.
      What would you do if your PO ambushed you getting a package from a well known former drug dealer in the lobby of your apartment. You have food stamps, kids to take care of, a job your need badly and a deferred sentencing that you're working hard to finish.

      Boom it's all done, you're convicted for meeting the postmates man in the lobby.

    12. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by kenh · · Score: 1

      I would sleep better knowing my neighbors are not rapists or murderers.

      Isn't that the purpose of the landlord's background check before renting the apartment?

      --
      Ken
    13. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by kenh · · Score: 1

      You're literally asking for state surveillance of people coming and going from their homes

      No, you failed to read the first line of the article summary - the facial recognition system is being installed on a camera in the 700 unit building entrance, not in front of every door or hallway. Such a system would be incapable of tracking/correlating "people coming and going from their homes".

      --
      Ken
    14. Re:Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be a mindless toady. We have an entire Republican party for that.

      Yes. Be a drone that blindly follows the party that does not respect borders, believes there are 87 genders, wants 70% of your income for "wealth redistribution"...

  8. Re: Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    The only appropriate response I can think of is fuck you. Youâ(TM)re one of these tyranny-facilitating assholes who deserve neither liberty OR security. Get off my lawn!

  9. We're already tracked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I live at a 200 unit complex. All exterior doors are secured (except the leasing office when they're open and can observe people entering) and we have to swipe a fob to get in. It's the same system I have at some of my offices so I know all activity is logged. Our apartment doors also have fobs to lock/unlock and I'm sure a log is kept within the lock itself. That being said, access by facial recognition, even if it results in the same level of tracking abilities they already have, would make me extremely uncomfortable and I would fight it as hard as I could.

    1. Re:We're already tracked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As a landlord, facial recognition would let me avoid all the calls about lost or broken fobs. A 700 unit building needs at least 1403 keys and locks or codes need to be shuffled each time a tenant moves out. Keys are lost/stolen which requires a lock change. Codes are forgotten which requires time to ensure the person actually lives there before resetting the lock, then another family member complains about the old code not working. Codes are shared then the landlord gets a frantic call asking for the codes to be changed to keep an Ex out. A lost master or maintenance key may require changing the keys of everyone in the building. Any break-in from a shared key/code gets the landlord sued for not providing enough security. Any residents cramming people into a unit gets the landlord sued by the city for not following the housing codes despite the tenants hiding the people from the landlord. Any tenants swapping in a deadbeat then disappearing requires the landlord to evict the deadbeat and a lawsuit from other tenants if the guy turns out to be a criminal or sex offender.

      Facial recognition locks would solve nearly all of those problems and let me automate another segment of the business. However, I highly doubt this system works 100% of the time and I wouldn't deploy it. All it would take is one angry person to sandpaper all the camera lenses and suddenly you have to replace every lock and have tons of angry tenants. I guess the same applies to super glue and standard locks, but I feel it has a higher chance to happen with the cameras. You'll also need to deal with family/dog walkers/caretakers/etc... needing to be added to the lists. There are some valid reasons for people to share keys. Since this would need to be done in person to get the face scan and I highly doubt tenants would be given the rights to do so, this will likely be an unexpected increase in management time. Kids may need to have their faces scanned multiple times as they grow (smarter systems can handle that, but are more hackable) and the systems will need to be installed at a low height which will annoy the taller tenants. How long does the battery backup last, assuming it has one which it must have. There are a bunch of other issues, such as a kid hiding an IR light focused on a neighbors lock, but I won't list them all. I'm not convinced the system would be an improvement. It'll improve some issues while creating new issues and I can't say which will outweigh the other.

      It's too late to complain about the privacy issue. Identification can easy be added to the security cameras at the main door or in the hallways. You can track faces, walking gait, body/clothing, and which doors they enter/leave. The building likely has elevators and I'd bet money there's cameras in there too. Key fobs can log everything, so there's only a minor loss of privacy if switching from keyed locks. I say minor because the fob logs are probably kept longer than the security feeds. If that's not the case, then it's possible there's no change in privacy.

      Though I'd bet this new system is more hackable than the other systems.

    2. Re:We're already tracked by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Almost all electronic locks contain an old school relay and will pop open if a strong magnet is put in the right spot, no logging. _All_ the chinesium ones will.

      Test it.

      Sure you're not a crook, but do you think they don't know?

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    3. Re:We're already tracked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This idiot Wimpwuss believes there's "$50 of steel in a car" lol, you can't fix stupid and Republican and troll, you can only elect it and then watch it die in prison anyway.

    4. Re: We're already tracked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it worked as well as my iPhone I would sue for frequently being locked out.

    5. Re:We're already tracked by mark-t · · Score: 1
      Wouldn't do squat if there's a quarter inch of iron between you and the mechanism that unlocks... Iron won't really block a magnetic field, but it can certainly redirect it, and can substantially weaken what actually gets through.

      The only way to interfere with the interior of a mechanism surrounded by a highly permeable material using magnetic fields would be from the side where the door meets the door jam, which means the door would have to be open already for you to do anything like that.

    6. Re:We're already tracked by sjames · · Score: 1

      Odds of a landlord springing for the quarter inch iron plates? ZERO.

    7. Re:We're already tracked by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Those plates could already be part of the door frame.... a quarter inch isn't very thick.

    8. Re:We're already tracked by sjames · · Score: 1

      It's 2 to 4 times thicker than the sheet in a typical door frame.

  10. they tried using this at creimer's place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but the software said "one face at a time"

    1. Re:they tried using this at creimer's place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Creimer is wearing a "I Shoot People" t-shirt in his latest video about alien moms. I didn't think he carried a weapon in his government IT job at the FBI.

    2. Re:they tried using this at creimer's place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sure thing chris
      i am continually astonished that you are still at it
      there's no one watching and your content is quite boring
      only your video about your dad had any merit
      and speaking of t-shirts
      where is your eevblog t-shirt
      considering you only made one post at eevblog
      did you ever get your circuit to work btw

  11. Reliability by Livius · · Score: 1

    Now, I realize even humans are not 100% perfect at recognizing faces, but is facial recognition really good enough for this kind of application? You know it will get it wrong at least some of the time.

  12. Detecting unauthorized subletting? by Nonesuch · · Score: 1
    Seems like an extreme way to crack down on unauthorized subletting and rent-control fraud.

    Tenants of rent stabilized apartments are allowed to sublet their apartment, but this incurs a 10% surchage, so there's an incentive to sublet without notification.

    1. Re:Detecting unauthorized subletting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That, indeed, was my first thought -- when a human has to come in and get their face "registered", they will probably have to show id. I suspect the complainers are largely subletting w/o telling the landlord and paying extra.

      Also, these tenants may be violating "succession rights" because they were originally just roommates of the primary leaseholder or were not living in the unit in a "family member" relationship prior to the primary leaseholder having died or moved:

      What types of people have succession rights?

      Succession rights in rent-stabilized and rent-controlled apartments apply to family members who are living with the prime tenant (the tenant named on the lease, or the tenant of record in a rent-controlled apartment) prior to when the prime tenant moves or dies. The definition of “family member” also includes people in “nontraditional” family relationships, including unmarried couples and people in other“family-like” relationships.

      Roommates who are not in a family relationship with the prime tenant do not have succession rights, nor do subletters (legal or illegal), nor family members who are not living with the prime tenant.

    2. Re:Detecting unauthorized subletting? by torkus · · Score: 1

      Did you read what you linked or just the title?

      You can sublet for a max of 30 day, with a max 10% surcharge only if the place is furnished (plus a 10% surcharge from landlord), must maintain that as your primary residence, and need your landlords consent (which can't be unreasonably refused).

      So yes, technically a rent-stabilized apartment can be sublet ... briefly. It cannot be perpetually used as a for-profit rental unit by the original tenant like many are doing. Also, that applies to rent-stabilized, NOT rent-controlled. Those cannot be sublet. Also, section 8 (subsidized housing) typically prohibits subletting.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
  13. Re:Tough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kill yourself

  14. guest / kid fees per person? Late night door fee? by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 2

    guest / kid fees per person? Late night door fee?

    Can they make you wait days to add an new person to the door system?

  15. How is this different from doormen? by mi · · Score: 1

    How is such technology different — in principle — from doormen? They too would look at everyone and remember — to the best of their ability — who walked in and out, and when?

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:How is this different from doormen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Doormen don't keep detailed ledgers of every single person living there and their visitors, when they came, who with, forever - etc. You're an apologist moron making a specious bullshit defense. Typical.

      "How is recording 100% of metadata on everyone in America forever for any purpose different than a court-ordered wiretap?" - Derp, moron.

    2. Re:How is this different from doormen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doormen forget and cannot remember exact dates and times.

      How would you like to have a record of everyone who visited your building for the last 20 years and who they were with?
      Then that can be cross-referenced with other databases to build a web of relationships that may or may not exist elsewhere online.

      That's the difference.

    3. Re:How is this different from doormen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doormen don't keep detailed ledgers of every single person living there and their visitors, when they came, who with, forever - etc. You're an apologist moron making a specious bullshit defense. Typical.

      "How is recording 100% of metadata on everyone in America forever for any purpose different than a court-ordered wiretap?" - Derp, moron.

    4. Re:How is this different from doormen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The tech can't be bribed to forget like a doorman can.

    5. Re: How is this different from doormen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be a great way to evict the drug dealers and crooks who are subletting. Would also be good to keep out the German Shepherd that was an 8 lb dog when the lease was signed.

    6. Re:How is this different from doormen? by mark-t · · Score: 1

      So you prefer human judgment because it is imperfect, and therefore someone else who might be lying can always plausibly present that the other person who may have relayed a sufficiently accurate recollection is actually making something up?

    7. Re:How is this different from doormen? by fafalone · · Score: 1

      I worked at the front desk of a Manhattan residential building, it was fully expected of me, but not doormen, to know every resident of the over 500 units, and stop anyone that didn't live there to check if they were on the entry list or call up and ask if the resident wanted them let in. It was serious too, new employees couldn't be alone at the desk until they could do this without accidentally stopping someone who lived there. Now of course we didn't log residents coming in and out, but between us and confirmed by the multiple cameras, it could have been done.
      So I don't see the big deal of this either unless it's cloud based, I sure as hell wouldn't want some off site service with the facial recognition logs (our camera system was entirely on site and air gapped from anything internet connected, that would be fine).

    8. Re:How is this different from doormen? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      You know who the doormen is, and have an opportunity to explain strange circumstances to them, and can actually provide assistance in case of difficulty. An anonymous tracking report, scannable by unknown people with no verification to the residents is a different. And it provides none of the help that a human doorman provides.

    9. Re:How is this different from doormen? by kenh · · Score: 1

      Doormen don't keep detailed ledgers of every single person living there and their visitors, when they came, who with, forever - etc.

      It's called a guest book, and every time I enter a skyscraper in NYC I am photographed, ID'd and the date/time of my entry/exit is recorded - exactly how is this different? Because it allows me to potentially avoid stopping at the reception desk, getting out my ID and posing for a picture?

      --
      Ken
    10. Re:How is this different from doormen? by kenh · · Score: 1

      How would you like to have a record of everyone who visited your building for the last 20 years and who they were with?

      How is this any different from a security camera and sign-in book in the lobby of the building?

      This is at the entrance to the 700 unit apartment building, and BTW, a 700 unit apartment building is a pretty big structure, I bet their lobby/elevators aren't open to anyone that chooses to ride the elevators on a whim...

      --
      Ken
    11. Re:How is this different from doormen? by kenh · · Score: 1

      So it's wrong because it's not a doorman? Door men can be bribed, convinced to lie, etc. Is that really a better system than a single facial recognition system in the lobby?

      --
      Ken
    12. Re:How is this different from doormen? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid your question was "how such technology different". I provided a few distinctions. I also meant to say that the _doorman_ can actually provide assistance. They are, in fact, expected to provide assistance, to accept packages and to screen visitors in a way that a mere visual recording cannot. A doorman is a more transparent resource, accessible to the residents who might reasonably ask "did my kids get home?". They might also be notified that "I'm divorced, and my husband is not welcome." or actually report if a dozen underage children show up with alcohol, permitted by a particular tenant. Facial recognition has no sense of smell, nor can facial recognition hold a door for someone with a cane carrying groceries.

      This does not make it right, or worthwhile. I've merely pointed out some of the differences between that doorman and a camera with facial recognition.

  16. Getting closer to China... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean, look at their freedom.

    Oh wait...

  17. Errant recording should be banned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Errant recording of persons, places or activity not on your property such as my neighbor's doorbell recording my house, door and driveway 24 hours a day should be banned. As it stands, I can only prevent him from setting a tripod and camera up in front of my house.

    Watch the local news and you'll see package thieves recorded from multiple cameras when the person or car is NOT on private property.

    1. Re:Errant recording should be banned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the tripod and camera is on a publicly accessible location then he can take as many photos of your house as he wants. He can even set up a camera to monitor your house at all times. Anything visible from a place that he has legal access to is fair game.

  18. Someone doesn't want to lose fee money by ebonum · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When I lived in NYC, I knew lots of people renting "rent-regulated apartments". One worked at Goldman for 200K+ a year. It was a good deal. The person with the apartment pocked the rent spread each month. The Goldman guy paid about 75% or 80% of full market value and was able to save each month to buy an apartment.

    If you have a NYC rent stabilized apartment, market forces push you very hard to live outside the city and sublet. I'm going to guess the people who were subletting, the leasors, were not paying taxes. They were well motivated to not get caught.

    If the goal is to give poor people something for free, letting them sublet accomplishes that goal. Doubly so if they skip taxes.

    1. Re:Someone doesn't want to lose fee money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > market forces push you very hard to live outside the city and sublet.
      Market forces also push you to rob banks, for better return.

      > If the goal is to give poor people something for free
      Why is the landlord's obligation to give something for free and not the state's?

    2. Re:Someone doesn't want to lose fee money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because "some" people are abusing some aspect of something, as you describe, what does that actually justify in terms of infringing on the rights of all citizens? It's ~100% sure that not 100% of tenants are subletting!

      Surely there are more targeted ways of going after the problem than strip-searching people on the street, which facial recognition is an early precursor to, if dystopian trends are allowed to continue without any remeasure.
         

    3. Re:Someone doesn't want to lose fee money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      average bank robber gets less than 10k just a stupid risk/reward ratio

    4. Re:Someone doesn't want to lose fee money by Targon · · Score: 1

      What rights are being infringed if there is no log of when people enter/exit? A face recognition system can be as simple as a face unlock, but without logging the activity. Unlike key cards and such, which can be passed off to people who are not actually on the lease, a face recognition can simply check if you are on the lease and bingo, it opens. Nothing would be needed if you are visiting and someone comes to the door to let you in as well, no logging or anything like that.

      So, you want to enter without being let in by the person(people) on the lease and you have not made arrangements with the landlord/super/manager for someone to be there temporarily? Seriously, there is a shortage of affordable apartments, and you want to support people who are scamming the system?

  19. You're a moron Huxster. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You deserve the death penalty for being this stupid and trying to chip away at the Constitution in your idiocy. The Founding Fathers would have just shot you.

  20. prove it doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you don't like it prove it doesn't actually do what it is supposed to. Try taking your picture, printing it full size and then have someone other than yourself try entering the building by holding the picture in front of their face. If the system lets them in then it is easily duped and go back to whatever was being used before.

  21. main door only? with an 24/7 doorman security? by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    main door only? with an 24/7 doorman security?

    1. Re:main door only? with an 24/7 doorman security? by kenh · · Score: 1

      This article is about a 700 unit building where the landlord is installing one camera in the entrance.

      Anything beyond that simple fact is a fever-dream of a self-professed "privacy advocate" that couldn't wait for an actual violation of their privacy to spin their dystopian fantasies here on Slashdot...

      --
      Ken
    2. Re: main door only? with an 24/7 doorman security? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It starts small asshole.

      You are a brainwashed faggot who is trying to convince smart people their wrong. NO you are wrong, we don't
      Like survaliance of any kind. Now fuck off with your strawman scenarios. Back to the pile repubtard fag!!
      Keep begging the govt to control you, that's a good boy. Idiot.

  22. Amazon hub by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is similar to HOA and landlords mandating Amazon Hubs in condominiums and apartment buildings. All packages that get sent to an address, not just ones from Amazon get scanned and put into the lockers. So Amazon would now have information of competitor retailers, employer information, family and friends address that send you stuff.

    Worse, Amazon hubs have cameras to capture images of people. This is a huge privacy concern and HOAs / rental apartments should not opt in residents by default. It's just plain wrong.

  23. Does not the law require ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Locks? And keys for those locks? Provided to tenants? So they can get in the building? Is it not unlawful for the property owner to change the locks and not provide a key? Is it not unlawful for the property owner to willfully deny tenants access to their demised premises? Is it not unlawful for the property owner to make changes to the terms of the demise during its term? Have the tenants no recourse (I know that here in the Free World, in a similar circumstance, the tenant, being unlawfully locked out of the demised premises, could merely call the police and "lawfully enter" by whatever means were necessary) ...

    Of course, New York City being located in the Fascist States of America, anything is possible I suppose.

  24. "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshole? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just because "some people" are abusing some aspect of something, what does that actually justify in terms of infringing on the rights of all citizens? It's ~100% sure that not 100% of tenants are subletting!

    You can't just say 'anything goes because some % of people are abusing AirBNB,' that's 100% retarded.

  25. "Shanghai" Bill continues to lie uncontrollably. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill got caught lying 12-25 times repeatedly stating "Blood plasma is sterile" and then later that "The Chinese Govt does not directly censor Chinese citizens" and other absolute bullshit head-in-ass retard-level lies. You're not trustworthy.

    You are not a source of information that anyone should or even could trust, knowing your dishonest history. Sorry. That's what accountability means when you get caught lying repeatedly, over and over, even after directly corrected.

    You're a liar, Bill. You have zero statistics about how many companies sell their customer/passersby data. Zero. You're nothing but a liar.

  26. Decptive or idiot landlord by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    The police can request any camera information and warrant for that data to be supplied under the Homeland security act (IIRC).

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    1. Re:Decptive or idiot landlord by kenh · · Score: 1

      The police can request any camera information and warrant for that data to be supplied under the Homeland security act (IIRC).

      The police can interrogate the doorman.
      The police can review security camera footage.
      The police can feed the CCTV footage into their own facial recognition software, if interested to.
      The police can stakeout the lobby.

      What does the on-site facial recognition system add to the already existing way the police can monitor anyone's comings and goings from any apartment building?

      --
      Ken
  27. Thank goodness by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Thank goodness the police or government would never misuse such a wonderful surveillance tool.

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  28. but it's for your safety... by squash_me_quickly · · Score: 1

    so that...
    - in case if a fire, they know how many people are in the building
    - in the case in crime, they can rule you out if you we're not in the building

    it's because they have stock in the company that produces Anonymous/Guy Fawkes masks which you'll start wearing whenever your in the building

  29. "... to purchase a little temporary Safety" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    THERE IS NO 1:1 THAT THESE CAMERAS WILL MAKE ANYONE MUCH SAFER AT ANY COST. Where does that justification for anything end? Nowhere.

            "The actual murders, A&B, rapists and other shitbags that roam the streets today" - You really think they're going to be arrested by facial recognition cameras lol. You're that dumb. Wow. Behold, the moron marching into bondage.

                "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."
                Go fuck yourself sir. You are under-thinking this on ALL levels.

    Prediction - you are murdered by someone with a paper bag over their head with eye holes cut out, and it goes unsolved forever because you're a fucking moron who deserves NEITHER!

  30. Security Cam Vs. Facial Recognition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Installing security cameras is one thing, but having those cameras recognize your face is another. That's bullshit.

    1. Re:Security Cam Vs. Facial Recognition by sabbede · · Score: 1

      Why? Plenty of buildings have doormen that recognize all the tenants. Are they bullshit?

    2. Re:Security Cam Vs. Facial Recognition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The doorman isn't writing your name down in a book along with the exact timestamp. Nor is this information retained forever. Nor is this information shared with 3rd parties.

  31. Re: HOMO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, a black heterosexual you wordsmith.

  32. Priceless Hypocrisy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ha, ha, ha, I can't stop laughing!

    "We don't want to be tracked," said Icemae Downes, a longtime tenant. "We are not animals..."

    And everyone of them has a carry along tracking device.

    This is Priceless Hypocrisy.

    But the whole tracking humans thing, is just plain evil.

  33. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by kenh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's a great argument - can we apply it to gun rights? Lets see, there are 300 million guns in America, and several thousand (give or take) are used in crimes during the year - so why infringe everyone's rights to own a gun because of a few bad apples?

    I don't think the issue is Airbnb, I think it has to do with rent subsidies/rent control.

    --
    Ken
  34. The Reality of What's Going On by darkmeridian · · Score: 5, Informative

    The tenants are living in rent-stabilized or rent-controlled buildings, which offer highly discounted rents. However, the tenants are required to use the discounted apartments as their primary residences. The city does not want tenants to turn around and sublet their apartments at market rates, and pocket the difference. So landlords have been installing cameras to see who is living in the apartments. The facial recognition system is another step in that direction.

    --
    A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    1. Re:The Reality of What's Going On by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The tenants are living in rent-stabilized or rent-controlled buildings, which offer highly discounted rents. However, the tenants are required to use the discounted apartments as their primary residences. The city does not want tenants to turn around and sublet their apartments at market rates, and pocket the difference. So landlords have been installing cameras to see who is living in the apartments. The facial recognition system is another step in that direction.

      Privacy is more important than any of that. I vote to throw everyone out of the airlock who disagrees.

    2. Re:The Reality of What's Going On by kenh · · Score: 1

      A tenant can sublet their apartment, with the landlord's permission, and for a 10% fee. The tenant can not establish primary residence elsewhere - if they do, and the landlord can prove it, the lease can be broken.

      https://www1.nyc.gov/site/rent...

      --
      Ken
  35. What are the cons? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Skipping over considering even a single one of them isn't actually advancing the debate, you're skipping weighing any cons entirely as if pretending there were none.

    Pretty suspicious that a bigot like yourself tries to attack someone on the basis of "pretending there were none" as if it were his place to point out the cons, when he's just questioning how bad they are.

    If you claim they are bad, then present us some evidence or insight as to why they are bad - why wouldn't even attack you from not pointing out the ways in which they are good, because that is not what you were trying to question.

    Cameras inside of a private apartment complex would seem like they would on balance be more bad than good, so what is the bad you think would be so very bad they should not be used?

    Frankly the way society is today if an apartment complex did not have cameras I would install my own, at least for the hall I was on. It's just a good idea.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:What are the cons? by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Remember the last swatting guy got twenty years. How about if the landlord gets the same, when their system falsely identifies someone and they get shot, the landlords facial recognition swatted them. How about locking people out and not letting them because, cough, cough, the facial recognition system told them to. How about you guests are they not entitled to privacy, so what if they wear a face mask or scarfe they are not allowed in the building. You can have cameras, you can not have facial recognition, the intent there is clear, the landlords control of the tenants, monitoring all their comings and goings, locking people out to get rid of them, harass them and their guests and blame it on the computer because it told them to do it.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    2. Re:What are the cons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if instead they had a security guard who watched everyone coming in and took notes on peeps they didn’t recognize? Is that the same kind of creepy ness?

  36. Not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not outraged enough to move

    1. Re:Not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is being done in poor neighbourhoods. They don't have the money to move.

  37. Source photos? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In order to "recognize" someone's face, you first need a photo of that tenant's face with their name on it.
    Are landlords forcing their tenants to give them a photo of face? Or are they scanning their driver license photo
    into their facial recognition database? Or maybe they're grabbing photos off Facebook? NY landlords are sleazy as hell.

    1. Re:Source photos? by Swave+An+deBwoner · · Score: 1

      I agree with your last sentence, unfortunately.

      However they don't really need to register anybody, just collect the data and have the super tag the photos.

      But note that the summary says that this is being done in buildings containing rent-regulated apartments, where the obvious goal is to identify those tenants who don't come and go regularly so the landlord can evict them.

      It's not being done for security; you don't need facial recognition to provide recorded video to the police after a crime has been committed.

  38. Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by mark-t · · Score: 1

    But I don't see a single thing wrong with this... people who don't like it can move to another building.

    The landlord would, however, be voiding any leases currently in place since these facilities would not be in the lease's terms, and people should be free to find another place without violating any lease.

    1. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alright, we will install one in your building. After all, you've got nothing to hide, right?

    2. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by mark-t · · Score: 1

      I never said I have nothing to hide... everybody does.

      But to be frank, no... it wouldn't really bother me if something like this were installed in the apartment I lived in.

      Like I said though.. people who don't like it should be entirely free to leave, and not be in violation of any lease that did not explicitly and prominently include mention of this sort of monitoring provision.

    3. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Swave+An+deBwoner · · Score: 4, Informative

      The landlord in general would be happy as a pig in mud to void the leases of rent-regulated tenants. The whole point of this exercise is to obtain evidence that the tenant isn't coming and going frequently enough to prove that it's his/her "primary residence" so that the landlord can evict them.

      It's not for security. It's not to make it easier for the tenants to enter without carrying a key. It's to claw back the few remaining affordable apartments.

    4. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      et's make anal rape legal, everyone deserves it whether on the receiving or giving end.

      Well, perhaps not.
      What I don't understand is Americans like to pretend they are entitled to use lethal violence for small slights like threatening to steal your phone or wallet but this is fine.
      This is also a matter that might be regulated by the law and not by a contract. Like workers's rights. Remember when people had to go on strikes and be shot to death by the police or militias just so they put an end to children labor or 72 hour working weeks. It's not any better there you're like arbitrarily giving away emergency PATRIOT act anti-terrorist powers to nebulous private entities. If this was put into my building I would use 1) complaints 2) vandalism 3) violence 4) go to jail for it and not give a fuck.

    5. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had an apartment with cameras. They were for the hallways and the place was sort of dangerous. They were cheap. I liked them actually. They were usually good about checking footage for residents after something was missing.
      If they had told me they installed a facial recognition system to unlock the door. I would have been suspicious.
      It takes a threat from an attorney to get shit fixed in your apartment in these places.

      If your single dryer for the whole 100 unit building is broke all the time and your sink and toilet barely stay unclogged and it takes management the maximum amount of time to fix that shit (or more), you can bet they didn't put facial recognition on the door to save you from getting germs off the doorknob.

      I think you really deserve to check out this lifestyle.

    6. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not for security. It's not to make it easier for the tenants to enter without carrying a key. It's to claw back the few remaining affordable apartments.

      ... from people who are proving they don't need by not living in them.

    7. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Swave+An+deBwoner · · Score: 1

      Stay at your SO's home some nights, they stay at yours some nights. If you're not tucked in to your rent-regulated apartment at least (1 + 365/2) days every year then it's not considered your "primary residence". So you can sleep on the street from then on. These cameras are intended to provide easy data collection for that.

      But try to get the landlord to fix the peeling paint, the broken toilet, the hole in the ceiling, the hole in the floor, the windows that their contractor broke while doing exterior "maintenance". It's no longer a residence for the tenant, it's a part time job.

      Landlords in NYC have always refused to "open their books" when demanding rent increases. It's a very one-sided arrangement even with the increased enforcement now in NYC.

    8. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Altus · · Score: 1

      Its unlikely that this violates any leases. The lease does, generally, promise that public areas are not monitored and it would depend on your local laws if they even need to tell you that the public areas are monitored. Its possible that anything might be put in a lease but it is not something that is a part of a standard lease and you should not have any expectation of privacy outside of your unit because as soon as you leave your unit you are in a public and shared space.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    9. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Altus · · Score: 1

      If they are being illegally sublet then they are not "affordable." They are being sub-letted out at a profit, illegally, by the people who's rent is being controlled by the government.

      If the people who were the original tenants under rent control still live in the apartment then the rent control is valid and they are allowed to stay at the low rent as the law intended.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    10. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Targon · · Score: 1

      The real reason is so those who are NOT on the lease are not the ones living there. So, no problem if you don't show up often or anything like that, but if people not on the lease keep going in without the owner, doesn't that imply that there is a violation of the lease, because people not on the lease are living there?

      I agree that for the most part, it DOES make it easier for those who should be there(on the lease), and not as easy for those scamming the system.

    11. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Swave+An+deBwoner · · Score: 1

      I didn't mention subletting. The rent-stabilization rule in NY is not that "the people who were the original tenants under rent control still live in the apartment" as you state but rather that the original tenant(s) must be physically in that apartment for (1 + 365/2) days per year, every year. So it's a bit like being under house arrest except without having committed any crime beforehand.

    12. Re:Sorry, I'm going to sound like a dick here... by Swave+An+deBwoner · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anything about people not on the lease, however NYS law is that at least one person who is not on the lease may reside with the leaseholder (the "roommate law").

      But as I replied to Altus, it is definitely false that there is "no problem if you don't show up often or anything like that". The NYS rent stabilization law requires that you show up often - specifically at least (1 + 365/2) days per year. Landlords love to claim that the tenant is there less frequently as a means to evict them.

  39. Look at that big puddle of drool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...It's from the FBI with their mouth wide open and rubbing their palms together and the thought of this becoming commonplace.

  40. Whoa there fella by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Remember the last swatting guy got twenty years. How about if the landlord gets the same, when their system falsely identifies someone and they get shot

    Hey man, we aren't talking about face recognition tied to the ED-209 that is going to blow you away if you are not a match. We are talking about a system that MAYBE will just make you check in with a doorman instead of automatically opening the door. Would kind of prefer to avoid false positives you know? In fact if I could register the faces of friends it could be really handy having some degree of authorized access to my apartment allowed for if I was out traveling and forgot something.

    How about you guests are they not entitled to privacy

    And how many people have Ring today or other external cameras around houses without anyone caring in the slightest?

    so what if they wear a face mask or scarfe they are not allowed in the building

    No, just means they have to check in and show ID maybe. Which they have to do today...

    I just can't see any harm you are laying out here be any different than how things already work today, that's where my confusion with this as a problem comes in.

    the landlords control of the tenants, monitoring all their comings and goings,

    Again, this already happens today. In fact the idea of a nosy landlord is comically universal. People who do not like it do not live in monitored complexes.

    harass them and their guests and blame it on the computer because it told them to do it.

    You are ascribing things to a computer it's simply not doing. It's not telling anyone to do anything. It's just saying "Don't know who this is", and then the landlord or bellman is doing whatever they already are doing today anyway, since landlords and doormen remember faces too... Or maybe I shouldn't have said that, as I'm sure there will be calls for daily mind-wipes of landlords now.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  41. Dumb. by WolfgangVL · · Score: 1

    Mount that expensive and unpopular tech where all of these low income people can see it. Let me know how that works out for you.

    --
    You are being ripped off every second of every day, so that advertisers can help rip you off even more tomorrow.
  42. IT'S THE LYING, YOU LYING FAGGOT KEN DOLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " They see people almost being denied a supreme court seat because they once had a beer while in school." - No, he perjured himself under oath. It's not the beer, you lying faggot. IT'S THE LYING, YOU LYING FAGGOT.

    YOU TELL A LIE UNDER OATH AND YOU ARE A CRIMINAL. That he basically ATTEMPTED TO RAPE A CLASSMATE also didn't really rise to the occasion of a lifetime appointment to the SCOTUS without investigation.

    But with TRAITOR SUPPORTING DISHONEST FAGGOTS LIKE YOURSELF in charge? He sailed right through anyway, to lie another day.

    Dry your eyes, traitor. Your little perjurer didn't get caught - yet!

      https://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=13577626&cid=58274188

    1. Re: IT'S THE LYING, YOU LYING FAGGOT KEN DOLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This,
      The sooner the faggot does the better.

  43. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    My gun will never violate your right to liberty. Your car on the otherhand may take a life if you keep texting and driving.

  44. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by arbiter1 · · Score: 1

    That is next step argument after gun ban is to ban cars off the road since they are used in more crimes and death then a gun is. Just like a gun people that aren't supposed to be behind the wheel can get one and drive.

  45. IT'S THE LYING, YOU LYING FAGGOT KEN DOLL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " They see people almost being denied a supreme court seat because they once had a beer while in school." - No, he perjured himself under oath. It's not the beer, you lying faggot. IT'S THE LYING, YOU LYING FAGGOT.

    YOU TELL A LIE UNDER OATH AND YOU ARE A CRIMINAL. That he basically ATTEMPTED TO RAPE A CLASSMATE also didn't really rise to the occasion of a lifetime appointment to the SCOTUS without investigation.

    But with TRAITOR SUPPORTING DISHONEST FAGGOTS LIKE YOURSELF in charge? He sailed right through anyway, to lie another day.

    Dry your eyes, traitor. Your little perjurer didn't get caught - yet!

        https://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=13577626&cid=58274188

  46. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by cayenne8 · · Score: 2

    That's a great argument - can we apply it to gun rights? Lets see, there are 300 million guns in America, and several thousand (give or take) are used in crimes during the year - so why infringe everyone's rights to own a gun because of a few bad apples?

    Well, to give a car analogy....

    When someone kills 1 or more people with a car...you don't blame the car or try to ban them, you know?

    Guns like cars are just tools, plain and simple.

    They don't kill people on their own...it takes a person to misuse a car, gun, knife, etc to kill another person.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  47. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corporate Progressive nazis sure do hate AirBNV, an armed free populace, AND tenant rights.

  48. Re: Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer by astrofurter · · Score: 1

    Are you on crack, broham? You expect the NYPD to... fight criminals??!! Have you ever _been_ to New York?

    Get real. The cops here have no interest in reducing crime. They are basically a gang of street thugs. If the City gets safer, the police budget might get cut. Preventing that is job #1.

    This dystopian technology will be used to kick the poor and squeeze the working class. NOTHING good will come of it. The City will remain as dangerous and filthy as ever.

  49. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    Guns are nothing like cars when it comes to defining thema tool. Actually the biggest tools are those making this argument in the first place.

  50. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guns are nothing like cars when it comes to defining thema tool. Actually the biggest tools are those making this argument in the first place.

    Shut the fuck up, you moron. A gun is a tool, designed for a specific purpose. Just like a hammer is. Yes, a hammer can be abused to break kneecaps as well as drive in nails. And cars become weapons in the hands of drunk drivers.

    The parents point was to blame the people abusing tools, not the damn tool. I don't give a shit how emotional you get looking at an AR-15 sitting on a table. Without human interaction, there is no way that tool will harm you or anyone else.

  51. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    And your gun couldn't take my life??

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  52. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    What matters is, inanimate or not, guns seem to be doing a very good job of finding the people who will use them on innocent people. If guns weren't so good at it, there would be no need to limit them. Of course people blame the person who used the gun, but usually that person is dead so what good does that do?

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  53. Yet buildings with doormen are preferred. by sabbede · · Score: 1

    Why is a face-recognizing person a good thing and a face-recognizing camera a bad thing? It can't be that the police can check it's records, a doorman will tell them just the same.

    1. Re:Yet buildings with doormen are preferred. by aicrules · · Score: 1

      because boogeyman

    2. Re:Yet buildings with doormen are preferred. by MooseTick · · Score: 2

      "It can't be that the police can check it's records, a doorman will tell them just the same."

      Doormen don't usually work 24/7 and timestamp every entry to the second. Also, they generally don't remember who came/went perfectly for years after an event.

      Just like its ok for police to see you walking around public, but most people wouldn't like them recording every movement for posterity.

  54. Fucking evil. We need better laws. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This orwellian shit is rolling out slowly to all. Now at US airports, The US only cares about tracking you and making money. China and India have systems that are pure evil.

  55. Re:LANDLORDS HAVE THE RIGHT!!! by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1

    If the public at large isn't concerned with privacy, that just proves how stupid the average member of the public is.

  56. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    No, because guns don't murder people. Criminals do.

  57. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Except more people are killed by bricks than by rifles.

    Murders have remarkably stable over the last 20+ years at around 13,000/year +/- 1,000. That means, that as the population has increased murders have decreased.

    Each year about 400 people are murdered by rifles.
    Knives are about 1800/year
    Blunt objects are about 600 /year. So bricks, clubs, hammers kill about 50% more people per year than do rifles.
    Personal objects (hands, feet) kill around 850 /year.

    The choice of killing are handguns. However, I rarely hear gun control people talk about handguns - they're always talking about rifles like the, oh so scary AR-15. And yet rifles make up less than 5% of the murders in this country.

    And the overwhelming amount of murders are ... GANG violence. We have a GANG problem.

    We used to have guns sent anonymously in the mail from Sear Roebuck catalogs. - No Problem.
    We used to have gun clubs and rifle ranges at schools. No Problems.

    Now we have a problem? Why? It's not the guns. It's something else. You're not focusing on the problem if you're focusing on the guns.

    Now, if the problem is citizen opposition to government control; if it's citizen opposition to re-education camps; then yes - citizen ownership of rifles is a problem.

    US Statistical Abstract - 2012

    Year - 2000, 2005, 2008,2009 Handguns - 6,778 7,565 6,755 6,503
    Rifles - 411 445 375 352
    Knives or cutting - 1,782 1,920 1,897 1,836
    Blunt objects - 617 608 614 623
    Personal weapons - 927 905 861 815

    --
    If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
    Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
  58. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No but we regulate the fuck out of cars for that very reason. So by your argument, we should regulate the fuck out of guns too. Oh and you should be required to own gun insurance.

  59. Bringing Out the Dead - movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess NYC isn't that bad anymore, but it is still how I picture it. I'm about 3/4 of the way through the movie, and it just screams big city problems where everybody is a stranger and a theoretical enemy. I can see a lot of apartment guys trying to shut out psycho people activity.

  60. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by PPH · · Score: 1

    Oh and you should be required to own gun insurance.

    Got it. Its part of my homeowners liability policy. And the increased risk is so far down in the statistical noise level that my insurance agent says they don't bother to ask about gun ownership.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  61. Re:guest / kid fees per person? Late night door fe by kenh · · Score: 1

    Did you even bother to read the very first line of The Fine Summary - I quote:

    A Brooklyn landlord plans to install facial recognition technology at the entrance of a 700-unit building

    How, exactly, will the landlord connect anyone that walks in the entrance of the 700 unit building with a particular apartment to charge your imaginary "guest/kid fee"?

    --
    Ken
  62. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OTOH I burn-down every AirBNB I see strictly for karmic purposes.

  63. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My dick is a tool, to and beats the shit out of your tiny flaccid gun you sorry excuse for a man. Keep compensating tho

  64. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by greythax · · Score: 1

    A criminal could steal your gun and use it. Happens literally every day.

  65. Easy way to fight this technology in New York. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just claim Islamophobia and watch it get banned faster than extra-large sodas with plastic straws in them.

    After all, how are you supposed to scan someone's face through a burqa?

    This could easily be spun as a "No Muslims Allowed" technology.

  66. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A criminal could steal your car and use it. Happens literally every day.

    Time to ban your ability to own the car you paid for?

  67. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    That still is the criminal doing the criminal things not the gun.
    I personally have never seen a gun jump up and shoot someone without a human holding it. Well I saw it in a video game, you're not imagining video games are real life are you?

  68. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    Cars have utility that goes way beyond killing people and target shooting.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  69. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    Bricks have a functional purpose. Guns do not.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  70. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Self-defense is a functional purpose.
    Hunting is a functional purpose.
    Not being helpless in the face of tyranny is a functional purpose.

    The US today, is going through it's version of the Chinese Cultural Revolution.

    --
    If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
    Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
  71. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    Self defense is a fictional purpose because nowhere is life really that dangerous. You do not live in the wild west, we have police services. If you are having gun fights every day then I suggest you move, pronto. Even in violent America, you're not likely to be in a place where you need a gun to protect yoruself ever. Also, I seem to remember a gun being at one of the previous school shootings and being not much good at all. I don't blame the guy for not wanting to sacrifice his life for other people's kifs. Shot guns are for hunting, not assault rifles, if you want a two-load shotgun then fine. You already are defenseless if the government becomes tyrannical. How could you ever have enough weapons to stand up against a modern tank?

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  72. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    You watch too many movies. You think a gun makes you some movie hero. It doesn't. It just creates more danger for everyone.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  73. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cars don't kill people, murderers do....

  74. Re: Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They took our jobsssss!!!

    Back in the pile faggot!

  75. Re: Wouldn’t you want this to keep you safer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would argue the building constitutes their home, not just their apartment.

    But your just another repubtard fag who loves when govt takes control. But cries "mahhhh rights" while at the same time trying to trample on everyone else's.

    You are apart of the problem
    Asshole. Back to the pile faggot!

  76. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    There are 100s of stories every day of police taking 10 minutes to arrive - and that's in an urban setting. In rural settings police are often 30+ minutes away. You're dead or raped in that time.

    The media's coverage of defensive gun use is close to non-existent. Not because it doesn't happen but because they are, in this arena, propagandists. Depending on what is constitutes defense gun use the stats run from over 1000/week to 10,000 a week.

    The following article, using a very strict definition of DGU estimates a bit over 1000/week.
    http://www.vpc.org/studies/jus...

    According to you pre-WW1 technology semi-automatic riffles are "assault weapons." I stressed pre-WWI because there is very little about today's AR-15 - or any other semi-automatic rifle that separates it from earlier semi-automatic rifles: at least as far as accuracy, speed of delivery, and magazine capacity are considered. Don't believe me? Look at what is banned - it all ergonomically and safety related add-ons.

    Expandable stocks,
    thumbhole stocks,
    pistol grips,
    suppressors (makes it less loud) Bullets break the sound barrier there is no "silence" for that. Suppressors lessen the noise of the expanding gas. It reduces it from EAR DAMAGING FUKIN LOUD to simply very LOUD.

    --
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  77. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Self-defense is not "movies." The right to self-defense is not something to simply give away.

    We don't have a gun accessibility problem. We have a gang problem. Take away gang related violence and our gun problem magically goes away.

    So, the real question is why are you so adamant about removing guns? If it was about safety you would be focused on gangs. If you were truly concerned about the instrument of destruction you would be concerned about pistols as they account for about 90% of the gun violence.

    Instead you focus on the firearms least used in gun violence.

    You evidently have far more faith in the benevolence of government than I do.

    --
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  78. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    If you want to get rid of gangs, do that too. Who says we can't do both? Pretty sure people have been working on that one for a long time already though.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  79. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    Even if it is 100 stories per day that you hear (which I doubt, since you probably don't even read 100 news stories per day) that gives you a 0.000000305 percent chance of anything happening given 327 million people in the US. Congratulations, you are hiding under your bed for a statistical non-event.

    --
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  80. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by cayenne8 · · Score: 2

    Self defense is a fictional purpose because nowhere is life really that dangerous. You do not live in the wild west, we have police services.

    I dunno where you live...but there are things in most of the country, even NICE neighborhoods call home invasions, or just people breaking in while you are home.

    The cops are NOT going to be saving you from that....all they can do, is try to gather evidence at the crime scene. If you are not armed, they may be trying to then investigate who broke in and killed you or your family.

    Not to mention, it is well established law that the police are NOT legally obligated to protect you from crime or prevent it from happening to you.

    If you don't want to have them, good...but you should not have say if I have them. I'm a responsible citizen and obey the laws.

    I enjoy taking my guns to the range for target shooting, I'm hoping to start competing in plate shooting matches...and I like going out to friends' houses where they have land outside city limits and we just shoot the hell out of things (2L sodas, watermelons, metal trashcans, etc...stuff that blows up is fun).

    Shot guns are for hunting, not assault rifles,

    Please get it straight...the general citizenry of the US do NOT have ready access to "Assault Weapons".

    The Assault rifle is one that is fully automatic. You pull the trigger with select fire enabled, and as long as you hold that trigger, it will continue to automatically fire until you release the trigger or run out of ammo.

    The common AR-15 is not an assault weapon. It is ONLY a semi-automatic rifle. You pull the trigger it fires once. It fires once only for each actuation of the trigger. Period.

    The AR-15 "looks" scary, but there is really nothing about it different than any other of the MANY semi-automatic rifles on the market. Many of them, if you didn't know guns...you would think were simple "hunting rifles"...wood stocks, not black....but they shoot the same ammo as the common AR, and are semi-automatic..firing the same rate as the AR-15, and you use magazines in them just like the AR.

    There are MANY other semi-auto rifles that shoot MUCH more powerful ammo than the AR. And many of those don't look scary, but are much more lethal, yet you don't have people trying to ban them.

    The AR is just the target, because it is the single most popular rifle in the US. It is enjoyed, because it is modular...you can take parts off, or build your own, if you want high end barrels, scopes, straps, attachments like lights, etc. But none of that stuff changes the fact it fires once for each actuation of the trigger.

    And I believe that there were maybe 400 rifle killings in the US last time study was done for a year....the vast majority of gun killings (crime) in the use are done with handguns...semi-automatic handguns.

    And most of these are gang members shooting each other.

    Yet, where is the push for banning those?

    Guns are just tools, they have many legal uses and do not kill people of their own volitions.

    --
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  81. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assh by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    Pretty much this. I however advocate for the removal of warning labels. So there's that.

  82. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    Yes, protecting yourself and your family. I'm gonna say that's a utility that should surpass everything your little car can do. Not to mention hunting. And well, I fucking like guns so.. This is why it was enshrined in the constitution. And owning a vehicle was not.

  83. Right to Privacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a private complex, you coward, not public housing. Even residents of public housing STILL have a God given right to privacy.

    Actually, the right (to require entry to the home only upon a warrant) was given by the Supreme Court IIRC around 1969 when they suddenly started pretending the Bill of Rights was meant to apply to state laws, because police in Ohio were being extremely unprofessional.

    So the Constitution being a "living document" is what makes the Fourth Amendment matter in maybe 99.995% of cases. Sssh, don't tell your originalist libertarian friends.

  84. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    This is why your statement is ridiculous.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  85. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by fluffernutter · · Score: 0

    Well you know what, if you really need to protect yourself that badly, I don't know why you stay there. Move your family out for their own safety and live somewhere where you don't experience that violence. That is no way to live.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  86. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Nobody asked what you think either way you dumb cunt, you have no idea and you ask the dumbest rhetorical questions for which you're too dumb to know the answer anyway. You're a shit show personified.

    And who asked what you think random AC? You seem very angry, maybe you should count to ten and take deep breaths.

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  87. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    My gun will never violate your right to liberty.

    Because no one has accidentally been shot before.....

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  88. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    No, because guns don't murder people. Criminals do.

    And cars apparently.

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  89. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Guns like cars are just tools, plain and simple.

    They don't kill people on their own...it takes a person to misuse a car, gun, knife, etc to kill another person.

    What is the purpose of a gun?

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  90. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Guns are nothing like cars when it comes to defining thema tool. Actually the biggest tools are those making this argument in the first place.

    Shut the fuck up, you moron. A gun is a tool, designed for a specific purpose. Just like a hammer is. Yes, a hammer can be abused to break kneecaps as well as drive in nails. And cars become weapons in the hands of drunk drivers.

    Yeah, and a gun can be used to shoot someone instead of shoot someone......wait a sec.

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  91. JEWISH slumlord by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not "New York landlord".

    There, fixed that for ya.

  92. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by c6gunner · · Score: 2

    Your argument started off with "guns have no purpose", evolved to "well I wouldn't use them for that purpose so it's not a real purpose", and ended off with "well if you really need guns you should just move".

    Do you even listen to yourself?

  93. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Except more people are killed by bricks than by rifles.

    Year - 2000, 2005, 2008,2009
    Handguns - 6,778 7,565 6,755 6,503
    Rifles - 411 445 375 352
    Knives or cutting - 1,782 1,920 1,897 1,836
    Blunt objects - 617 608 614 623
    Personal weapons - 927 905 861 815

    Ok wow, lets looks at this. First the claim more people are killed by bricks than rifles. You don't mention bricks again except to classify them as blunt objects. How many people were killed by bricks? You don't say. Then your numbers show the amount of blunt objects (broad classification of many things) vs rifles (one specific type of thing), whereas blunt objects vs firearms is completely skewed in the other direction.

    Next the deflection to gang violence. Gangs aren't new. People have been ganging up since one tribe decided they didn't like the next tribe over. How is it though you think those gangs are commiting a good number of those murders? With bricks? Yeah fucking right.

    Guns are far from the only problem but they are the center of a lot of issues and make most of them worse.

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  94. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know you were raised in an out of touch rich white liberal family when ....

  95. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Self-defense is a functional purpose.

    Only if the other person has a gun also

    Hunting is a functional purpose.

    Hmmmm, maybe but not with the same type of gun as self defence and then only take it when you're actually hunting, ok, i'll give you that one

    Not being helpless in the face of tyranny is a functional purpose.

    How's that working at the moment? US police shoot anyone they feel like. People that feel like they need to defend themselves about from the police are victimised and chastised even further. Take a knee? Trump is the closest thing to tyrant the us has ever seen and a big chunk of people are eating it right up. People want to go on about the 2nd amendment. Now's your chance. The situation the US finds itself in now is the situation that was written for so go grab your well regulated militia and go restore some order.

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  96. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    HAHAHAHA You're retarded. This is why everybody laughs at you guys on this matter. Stop letting emotion control your thought process. You're doing the same thing you laugh at the "YOU MURDER BABIES!!!" people for. get real man. I know from being here long enough that nothing I can say to you will make you think realistically about the situation. But you could at least try to be honest.

  97. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    Well, I guess with tesla... We can't really use that one anymore lol.

  98. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by fluffernutter · · Score: 0

    Yes. I really didn't know it was that bad in the US. Sorry for trying to change your mind.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  99. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    I posted a video depicting what guns were like when the constitution was written. Is that factually incorrect?

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  100. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    You sure did, but that had nothing to do with the subject at hand except emotion.

  101. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    The message is that the people who put guns into the constitution didn't foresee AK-47s. You're just being willfully ignorant and throwing out ridiculous comments so I will go away. Pretty much expected that.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  102. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Self-defense is a functional purpose.

    Only if the other person has a gun also

    A 120 lb woman can't defend herself against a 240 lb man breaking into her home. But if she had a pistol she could. Now both of them are in mortal danger. With a pistol or rifle she could defend herself against more than one attacker.

    Hunting is a functional purpose.

    Hmmmm, maybe but not with the same type of gun as self defence and then only take it when you're actually hunting, ok, i'll give you that one

    Actually yes - it would be the same rifle. A .223 (the most popular version of the AR) is a varmint round. In many states it's illegal to shoot deer with it (because it's not a powerful enough round.) It's the cartridge that determines the damage not the rifle (lock -brings in the rounds, stock - rests it against your body, and barrel - contains the exploding gas and directs the projectile. The rifles you're talking about banning are not assault rifles. They are all standard semi-automatic rifles. Again - take a look at what makes something an "assault" weapon. It's an ergonomic add-on (pistol grip). These add ons do not make the rifle more deadly.

    Not being helpless in the face of tyranny is a functional purpose.

    How's that working at the moment? US police shoot anyone they feel like. People that feel like they need to defend themselves about from the police are victimised and chastised even further. Take a knee? Trump is the closest thing to tyrant the us has ever seen and a big chunk of people are eating it right up. People want to go on about the 2nd amendment. Now's your chance. The situation the US finds itself in now is the situation that was written for so go grab your well regulated militia and go restore some order.

    Police shootings have not gone up over decades. The killings of unarmed men are in the 20-50 per year(Don't have time to look up Bureau of Justices Statistics right now)
    And, in case it matters, more white people are shot than black (although the percentage rate of black is higher than white)

    I don't consider Trump a tyrant. What has he done that contravenes the US constitution? Has he tried to quell free speech? No. But the left is shutting down discourse on college campuses (using violence and the heckler's veto). Left wing organizations try to deplatform people they disagree with.

    Has he shut down newspapers like Maduro did? Is Trump and evil right using their influence to deplatform people? No. Once again that's on the left.

    The authoritarian impulses are coming from the left. We are going through a Cultural Revolution now. I can see many on the left (those that equate small-government libertarians with fascists) being in favor of reeducation camps. So, yeah. Not giving up my rifles.

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  103. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by GLMDesigns · · Score: 2

    It's getting bad in Europe right now. You guys are hurtling towards serious sectarian violence. Freedom of speech is being quelled. Wrong-think prosecutions currently exist. Your society is fracturing badly. And all that is without the mass immigration and the cultural and financial problems that is bringing.

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  104. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    The rifles you're talking about banning are not assault rifles. They are all standard semi-automatic rifles. Again - take a look at what makes something an "assault" weapon. It's an ergonomic add-on (pistol grip). These add ons do not make the rifle more deadly.

    First off, the rifles I'm talking about banning are ALL FUCKING GUNS! Next I'm not American so I don't really have any skin in the game but where I am no one has any guns and society works just fine (ish). I'd imagine it looks much different from the inside out but a gun isn't the be all and end all solution to any problem.

    No it doesn't matter who they are, what's wrong is the police, or at least some of them, feel so threatened that anyone may gun them down that they are happy to shoot first. Remember that story of that (white) woman who rang them and when they turned up they shot her because she startled them or something? Or that kid who was just in the wrong place at the wrong time then got shot for doing exactly as the police said? If they weren't facing an armed populace they might not be so trigger happy? Sure innocent people are killed by police/die in custody all over the world but not in anywhere like the same numbers

    Without wanting to godwin they didn't think mussolini or hitler etc were tyrants when they were voted in either. Trump may not have shut down a newspaper but he flings about terms like enemy of the people and fake news and its very, dangerous. Did he attack that paper offices, no but it was because of him and the less said about whats going on the southern border the better eh? All that aside though, let's just agree that even if he's not a tyrant at all, he's still a fucking joke (how much time/money has he spent on golf alone?) but let's not get into that.

    Being deplatformed isn't an attack on your free speech, it's just people not listening anymore. You can still start your own website or stand on the street and rant your crazy shit in to the ether but no one has to listen. But no, blame it all on 'the left' and enjoy your 'cultural revolution' and with any luck it will all end in another civil war yeah?

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  105. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    We do regulate the fu*k out of guns.

    But your proposed common sense laws don't make sense. At least not if your goal is to prevent violence.

    Imagine that criminals were driving very fast and killing people. And your solution was "not to get rid of cars" but to get rid of "assault cars." Your solution was to ban black cars (red cars, brown cars, green cars and other colors were good - but black was not); and you banned detailing and you banned leather seats and wooden steering wheels. All these "common-sense" car-laws do not impede the use of "assault cars".

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  106. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    I don't see anything that Trump has done that's anywhere near fascistic.

    Trump says that MS-13 are "animals" and the media says that "Trump called immigrants animals." Criticizing the media is not fascistic. What's fascistic is creating laws preventing people from speaking their minds. I'm looking at you England and the EU.

    What's fascistic is preventing people from expressing themselves. I'm looking at you ANTIFA and everyone who doesn't speak out against their brown-shirted tactics. (In this case going Godwin makes sense).

    France has a homicide rate of 1.35 per 100,000

    North Dakota has a homicide rate of 1.2 with half the population owning guns and having more guns than people. (A lot more guns than people). Idaho has a homicide rate of 1.5 with far more guns than North Dakota.

    The District of Columbia, where guns are illegal have a homicide rate of 18.0

    Homicide rates in the US are low except for pockets of violence. 2% of the counties account for over 50% of the homicides. And even in those counties it's only pockets of violence.

    And guns will not be illegal in the US without extreme sectarian violence and the creation of a fascistic police state. By pushing for outright confiscation you are making the situation worse for yourself. There are a lot of labor Democrats who are already skeptical of the Democratic Party for abandoning labor and class in favor of environmentalism and identitarian politics. You push the gun confiscation and they won't sit out of elections; they won't vote for a labor third party - they'll vote Republican.

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  107. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by torkus · · Score: 1

    Oh, analogies...you so silly. Let's just take a tiny piece of the situation from just the right perspective and apply it to something entirely unrelated while claiming to make such a profound point.

    --
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  108. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    I don't see anything that Trump has done that's anywhere near fascistic.

    Lets forget about trump for a minute and about general rates of murder in different places and let me ask you a single question. How many innocent lives are your guns worth? I'm only talking school and other mass shootings here, parkland, pulse, vegas etc. Forget gang violence and other violent crime for a moment just ones that make international news.

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  109. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by painandgreed · · Score: 1

    Guns are nothing like cars when it comes to defining thema tool. Actually the biggest tools are those making this argument in the first place.

    Not really. There have plenty of cases in the US and other countries where guns were regulated. However, while homicides committed with a firearm did drop, the actual homicide rate does not. So, continuing the car analogy, as this is /., it's as if some people were killed with cars, so the banned cars, but everybody just started riding motorcycles and still ended up killing just as many people. What you do see with banning of guns is an increase in crime. Guns are a tool. They are not particularly effective in any case that is statistically relevant, but are in cases that are newsworthy. Banning them just makes people feel good about themselves and continue to ignore the underlaying issues. Americans are just murderous folks, and nobody cares about actually changing that.

  110. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Not me reading. There are, according to FBI and other reports, about 1000 defensive gun uses per week. As stated in the post - this is the most restrictive reading of defensive gun use. Depending on how it's defined it can be 10x that.

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  111. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Yes. There are too many school shootings.

    Since you're interested in the topic - you need to ask yourself:

    Why now and not 50 years ago when the percentage of gun ownership was far higher?
    Why now and not 80 years ago when you could get them anonymously through the mail?
    Why does the media not follow the recommendations of police and put out the killer's name?

    What is different in society now? What can we identify that can help?
    Should we stop medicating boys diagnosed with ADHD?
    Should we come up with socially viable means of expressing discontent and violence? Example boxing clubs.

    If guns are the problem then wouldn't there have been more violence, more school shooting before? We had gun clubs in high schools before. Hmm. There should have been a lot of school shootings. Nope.

    Finally why would you sacrifice your ability to defend yourself because of these events? Do you think governments never get tyrannical? Russia, Germany, China, North Korea, Cambodia - do you really think that can never happen again.

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  112. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by torkus · · Score: 1

    What is the purpose of a gun?

    Oh, back to this game yay. *eyeroll*

    But let's play along for a moment. There are many legitimate uses including...
    - Personal safety (and before you point out guns shoot more owners than criminals, that stat ignores the criminals it deters without shooting them)
    - Hunting
    - Pest control
    - Entertainment
    - Collecting

    Now, let's be honest...entertainment and collecting accounts for a large percentage of purchases. But so what? When did an object need to have direct, broad, and pervasive utility to be allowable? People buy tons of stupid, useless shit all the time. Some of it's quite dangerous and is ONLY useful for entertainment.

    TL;DR your question isn't relevant.

    --
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  113. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    Yes, because they weren't smart enough to know that it would evolve into that right? You understand WHY we have a right to keep and bear arms right? They wanted the citizens on par with the government so far as tools went. There is a reason for that. If the oppressive government has AK-47's and the citizens have Muskets.. Well, you can lie to your self but its not nice to lie to others. It is enshrined in the constitution right behind freedom of speech. I have however seen you advocate for the removal of free speech, and the right to bear arms. So I expect nothing less from you or your ilk.

  114. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Now because not those times

    It boggles the mind that you don't see guns as a big part of the problem.

    You can't even see the tyranny right in front of your face, but whatever, Carry on.

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  115. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    This same old tired list. Ok, I'll play again.

    Guns are only a valid defense against other guns.
    Hunting, yeah ok then, licensed firearms and all that, go for it.
    Pest control, there are much better ways than shooting them and bigger pests that do need shot falls back on hunting.
    Entertainment, you can still go target shooting without full fat guns.
    Collecting, ok have them deactivated and made safe and collect all you want.

    It seems to be ingrained in the american psyche that if you don't have a gun everyone you meet is going to attack, abuse and god only knows what else before your government inevitably goes mwa ha ha full on totalitarian while you sit there shitting your pants. Some americans at least, some are sensible.

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  116. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    You know what, I don't know how you live there I really don't. How there isn't massive immigration from that place is beyond me.

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  117. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    You really think you could stand up to the government with any gun you could buy. THAT'S the funny part.

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  118. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

    So we should just let them stomp on our face right? You are what the founding fathers feared the most.

  119. Re: "What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my assho by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    Yeah well like I tell people. I wouldn't live in a country that had gone that far over the edge. Glad I don't.

    Your society is sliding away and there is nothing you can do about it.

    --
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  120. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Being deplatformed isn't an attack on your free speech, it's just people not listening anymore. You can still start your own website or stand on the street and rant your crazy shit in to the ether but no one has to listen. But no, blame it all on 'the left' and enjoy your 'cultural revolution' and with any luck it will all end in another civil war yeah?

    Being deplatformed may not be against the law (today) but it is restricting people's ability to converse in the public square. Other people blocking you or voting you down into obscurity is fine. Being deplatformed by mega-corporations means not being able to communicate to other people. It's analogous to your computer preventing you from writing an article; or your email service preventing you from writing and sending emails.

    --
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  121. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    I have a .22, a .223 a .270 and a 12 gauge shotgun. I have never killed anyone. I have never brandished a gun at anyone.

    I have a recurve bow and a compound bow. I have never brandished them at anyone.

    I have had other rifles, pistols and shotguns over the years. When I was in Alaska I had a .45 as a protection against bears.

    Except for gangs and small pockets of violence the US is very safe.
    The real question is why you, who presumably understands that governmental tyranny can exist anywhere is comfortable and being helpless. And, not only comfortable in being helpless that you demand everyone else be just as helpless.

    And, with the rise of the authoritarian left - those that would happily put me in a reeducation camp - there is no way that I'm going to give up my guns.

    --
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  122. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Guns are only a valid defense against other guns.

    Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.

    As the saying goes: "God made men. But Sam Colt made them equal."

    A 120 pound woman has no chance against a 240 pound man. (Sh!t - even a 180 pound man)
    One man has no chance against 3 men determined to do him harm. (unless he is really skilled and they're not)

    A gun equalizes the situation. Now both sides are placing their lives at stake.

    Is it better for a woman to let herself be raped than risk dying by shooting her attackers (and have them shoot back if armed)? I can't answer that. But the option should be hers. Not yours.

    Guns help the physically weaker person even up the odds against the physically stronger (or more numerous) assailants.

    --
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  123. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    You have no more right to be on twitter than you do to be in any private club. They are free to set entry requirements (or lack thereof) and to kick your ass out for any reason they choose, including being an asshole. Don't like it? Start your own social network. It's not analogous to those things at all. Like I said, go shout your crazy to the ether, you might get got for public disorder but then you get to complain to the police and tell them what they can and can't do then you can come back here and tell us how it's there's no tyranny. I wonder if you would pull your gun on the authority to defend your right to free speech? That's what they're for right? One of the things anway.

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  124. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    You've never killed anyone, good for you. Not having a gun doesn't make you helpless, how impotent are you?

    How many schools are you willing to see shot up, and how many children killed so you can 'feel' safe?

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  125. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    A 120 pound woman has no chance against a 240 pound man. (Sh!t - even a 180 pound man)

    One swift knee in the happy sack and he'll drop like anyone else. Learn some fucking self defence instead of jumping straight to shoot the fucker. Say you had 3 guys with guns on you, do you think you'd be able to shoot all three before one got you? Of course not, except now you've been shot as well. By your logic the rape rate should be a lot lower in the US than in unarmed countries like the UK/Aus where guns have relatively recently been got rid off and without looking up the numbers I'd be willing to put money on that not being the case.

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  126. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Really? That's your response? You think it's that easy?


    If you believe in that nonsense. You will be fuked up if, and when, you ever have to defend yourself.

    --
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  127. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    They are free to do so. Isn't interesting how you bring in libertarian economic philosophy when it pleases you but reject it when it doesn't. If Twitter doesn't have to accommodate me then Woolworths doesn't need to accommodate black people.

    The concept - post 1964 - is that if you're open to the public you're open to all the public. So you think that Microsoft, or Dell, could prevent you from writing or reading things that they - as corporate entities - consider inappropriate? Yeah right.

    That's what you're arguing - that corporations like Microsoft, AT&T , Bic (for pens), Kimberley Clark (paper) can edit and censor your work because it suits them. And your response is - make your own paper. Make your own computer. Maker your own Twitter.

    Besides the fact that you wouldn't like that; besides the fact that the only reason you're supporting this is because you perceive it as a short-term gain - the real problem is a complete disrespect being shown to the free and open dissemination of ideas.

    And, more disgusting is the double standard. Farrakan calling for the elimination of jews fine. Imans calling for the elimination of atheists, gays and jews - fine. But Laura Loomer video taping sections of English and Australian towns where she is being asked to leave because what she's wearing doesn't conform to Islamic standards. - Well now, that we need to ban.

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    If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
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  128. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    So the only option for self defence in your world is a gun, is that what you are saying? By the way I have had to defend myself a few times, some times go less well than others but I still havent been shot or shot anyone and as far as I know everyone involved is still alive with no lasting injuries of any kind. So that's something.

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  129. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    So, a crazy person does something bad with an object. Now, that object needs to be removed.

    I guess he couldn't use gasoline and styrofoam and make a home-made napalm, or a truck to kill people. (That's never been done).

    There are 120 million gun owners. There are 400 million plus guns in the country. If gun owners were as violent as you irrationally fear they are this place would be a war zone. And, except for a few gang ridden areas the US is peaceful.

    But no, because of some people, glorified by the press (in that they become KNOWN, become famous) because this happens once in a while (way too often) you want to ban guns. And, you conveniently forget that there were guns 60 years ago and less shootings.

    Why do you ignore the obvious - that the problem is not in guns?

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  130. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    If Twitter doesn't have to accommodate me then Woolworths doesn't need to accommodate black people.

    So you are equal to all black people now? Did twitter stop you at the door and say not your kind or they take action after you'd done something? That's the difference there. Woolworths would be well within their rights to kick someone out of their store, black or otherwise if they were causing trouble in some way. Can you show me twitters, no blacks, no jews policy?

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  131. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    In 1964 we, as a country, came to the conclusion that if you have opened up your door to the general public that you must provide services to the general public. We are fine tuning that definition now with the bakers cases being brought to the Supreme Court.

    Those refinements uphold the standard that stores / companies must serve the public as a whole. The baker must sell the cake. It's saying that the baker is not required to do particular art work for e very customer. A band, for instance, cannot stop Nazi's from buying their music but they can refuse to play at a gathering.

    Twitter, Facebook, Google, etc... are public companies and they are restricting access by whim. They don't follow their TOS (See Farrakan) but terminate users for using memes they don't like "Learn to Code." This is contrary to the expectations raised in corporate / individual interactions as a result of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

    It's ironic to see many, who are opposed to libertarian ideals of free speech and who have a great dislike for corporations now pushing for trans-national mega corporations to be able to censor people at whim. This is a very short-term approach to the world.

    50 years ago the Tuskegee Experiments were going strong. Would you have liked "conspiracy mongers" talking about it being deplatformed. (If that was a thing back then?) If deplatforming was a thing back then the MLK and Malcolm X would have been deplatformed.

    A central case for freedom of the press took place in the 1930s. Could Communists publish and distribute information? The answer was yes. That unpopular speech was not to be suppressed.

    But you say, Twitter and Google are private companies. Would the company who made the press used by those communists (In Seattle I think) have been within their legal and moral rights to prevent their equipment from being used by these evil communists? Would you support that. How about the credit card companies refusing access to these same communists (of course there weren't credit card companies back then - but the point stands.)

    It's funny, sin't it, that you're taking such an extreme libertarian idea - that companies can do what ever they want. And, not only that, but you're defending them for their abuses. Nice.

    --
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  132. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    Pest control, there are much better ways than shooting them and bigger pests that do need shot falls back on hunting.

    Yeah. The other way is called poison. But you know what? Lots of people do not want to spread poison on land that they're growing food on. And, this poison affects all animals, not just the pests. And the pests - groundhogs, raccoons, can get into the 100s, if not 1000s in a hurry.

    The only two choices are shooting them (very humane) or poison (not as humane and very unhealthy for everyone). Trapping is not a solution. It's useful for a raccoon or two, not 100s of groundhogs

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  133. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    No. It's not the ONLY defense. I've been in fights and have never used a gun.

    This is not an either/or scenario. However there are times when a handgun or a rifle is the best tool for the situation at hand.

    Why are you so scared of an inanimate object?

    I have to question if your real concern is school shootings. It's that you want the population to be disarmed. And the question is why? An armed populace can tell the govt to fuk off. Why is that not a good thing?

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  134. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Christ wept I don't even know where to start with this ramble. Are you trying to suggest you can go into any private business, act however you want and they not only aren't allowed to stop you but must enable you? Is that what you're getting at here? If twitter et al was government run/owned you'd have a point but they aren't and they are afforded just as much freedom to do what they want as you are and if you want to play in their garden its their rules whether you like it or not. MLK managed to do all that without the internet and the gov doing everything they could to shut him up I really don't think if twitter was around it would have made much of a difference. For the record, twitter is a toxic shit stain on the internet but that's besides the point.

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  135. Re:"What have you got to hide?"= Inspect my asshol by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

    No. You can't act anyway you want. So you're saying that Twitter can ban whomever they want for whatever reason?

    That's happening right now. Respectful people, putting up respectful posts are being deplatformed. And you're applauding it.

    Farrakan says that Jews should be exterminated,. CRICKETS
    Point out scientific fallacies in the Koran (no the moon did not split in two, and no the sun does not set in a marsh land far to the west) and you're deplatformed. (A campaign of flagging the content maker is instigated, followed through 100s of times and YouTube caves.

    You're getting what you perceive to be a short-term gain here. You're coming up to a modern day Niemoller situation. "First they came for ..." Deplatforming speech is not good. Having tech companies being able to restrict speech at whim, not following their TOS is a problem.

    And you're happy. For now.

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