• Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    To keep the private info of the people involved actually private. License plates, descriptions, home addresses, personally identifiable info. It seems mad that all of that is just broadcasted out to everyone. Probably wouldn’t even be legal where I live because of privacy concerns.

    • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 months ago

      License plates are not private, they literally sit out in public all day. Descriptions are, again, not private. Even your license info is public.

      Not to mention, police reports are info that can be requested with a FOIA request. So all that info is public anyway, even if it was originally private.

      • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        Would you be willing to share your license plate number here?

        License plate, connected to description and description of the situation, medical stuff etc. would obviously be something I wouldn’t want broadcasted to just anyone. I don’t know how Americans are comfortable with that.

        Or well, probably aren’t since they’re finally getting around to encrypting that stuff. It’s wild that it wasn’t done before.

        • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          10 months ago

          Here? No. I keep my online and personal lives separate. That would be directly tying what are essentially two different people together.

          Are you willing to put your license plate on a piece of paper and display it on your house? What about your address on your car? Your name on your car, house, phone number?

          All this info is already there. You can find it all yourself, or pay like $15 to have a company do it for you, and you’ll get a boatload more. Employer history, address history, vehicle history, current phone number, current address, and more.

          I guarantee this info is all readily available in other countries as well, though I admit the legality of general public getting their hands on it may be in question.

          • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            I wouldn’t want any of my info being broadcasted to public without my specific approval. Especially connected to other info like a specific situations with police, medical info, whatever might come up. Imagine being a victim and on top of the shittyness of that having all your info just broadcasted out like that.

            You said license plates were public info you were fine with being broadcasted in public. Not sure why you’re hesitating now.

            I’m being facetious. Of course I know. Nobody wants that shit being broadcasted out without their approval. Imagine if I just shared your address or license plate. The audience here is undoubtedly smaller than what you’d get with NYC police radio, but still.

            • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              10 months ago

              Why would a victims information be broadcast over the radio? And why would it matter? “Omg someone on the other side of town is going to know I got stabbed I’m so embarrassed!”

              It’s not like they are sitting there over the radio giving a deep dive on the person.

              You said license plates were public info you were fine with being broadcasted in public. Not sure why you’re hesitating now.

              That’s like saying “if we were talking face to face you’d be comfortable introducing yourself by name, why are you hesitating now?”

              The audience here is gigantic. This is a public website, accessible without credentials, stored in perpetuity on any number of websites. And this is a username which has received death threats, among other threats.

              On the other hand, anyone who knows my real name can just look up my address, assuming they know any number of secondary pieces of info. Literally saying “Hi I’m Kairu Byte from Beverly Hills” would likely be enough info to get my exact address. Or, just punch my license plate into a website.

              I get that you feel like that info is private in the real world, but it really isn’t. Not in the slightest.

              • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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                10 months ago

                It can cause further harm to the victim for their information to be broadcasted out. A lot of victims wouldn’t want their information and that of the situation to be shared, obviously. And it would be broadcasted because police report what they’re doing over the radio, ask for confirmation or checkups and all that. Here it wouldn’t matter so much because of encryption, with unecrypted traffic that sort of normal radio traffic would be obviously problematic.

                That’s like saying “if we were talking face to face you’d be comfortable introducing yourself by name, why are you hesitating now?”

                No, the radio traffic is unencrypted and broadcasted out to everyone who wants to listen. That’s the whole problem.

                The radio traffic is broadcasted unencrypted to everyone willing to listen, indiscriminately. It’s not one to one. And people share that online too. I know I’ve listened to a few streams. It’s very much like writing shit online. Someone just needs to pick the right website and you’re set.

                It’s not like talking face to face, it’s yelling across a busy market place, with some people recording and broadcasting everything people are yelling.

                • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  10 months ago

                  Listen to a large cities broadcast for a while, there’s no crazy info being shared. There’s no reason for a cop to be talking about a victim beyond general terms where PII is concerned for the most part. They take that info down, but that’s about it. They aren’t saying “Mary sue at 411 Texas Roadhouse Drive, the 41 year old woman who drives a red sedan, was stabbed by her dog.” They’re going to say “requesting ems for a stab wound near Texas Roadhouse drive and Kentucky fried chicken way.”

                  And again, all of that info is available to the public regardless. Unless the cops are doing their job wrong and/or doing shady shit at least. You can even FOIA body cam footage, which is going to contain all that radio chatter anyway.

                  • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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                    10 months ago

                    They probably have to be (or try to be) vague about it, sending info through other means because it’s unencrypted and broadcasted to everyone. But when I listened to, there were addresses, license plates, what was happening and so on. You need to exchange some level of info, would be pointless to have the radios otherwise. And when exchanging such info, better to have it be encrypted.

                    And again, all of that info is available to the public regardless

                    And yet you’re unwilling to indiscriminately broadcast the info here. Even if you don’t seem to knowingly recognize the difference between the info being public in some form and broadcasting it indiscriminately to anyone wanting to listen, you don’t want to share it here because you know it’s different.