For years, Flock Safety has marketed itself as a company helping law enforcement solve crimes while respecting privacy. Its message has been simple and reassuring: the company's cameras don't track people.
But an investigation by InvestigateTV, combined with the company's own training materials, security vulnerabilities, and documented cases of misuse, is raising serious questions about whether that claim withstands scrutiny.
What emerges is a picture of an increasingly sophisticated surveillance network spanning tens of thousands of cameras across the United States—a network capable of documenting the movements of millions of ordinary Americans who are not suspected of any crime.
Critics say the issue is no longer whether the technology catches criminals. The issue is whether Americans are quietly accepting a system of mass surveillance whose capabilities extend far beyond what many citizens realize.
A Nationwide Surveillance Network
Flock Safety, headquartered in Atlanta, provides automated license plate readers and AI-powered cameras to thousands of police departments nationwide. According to the company, its systems help solve approximately 700,000 crimes every year.
The cameras record every passing vehicle, capturing time-stamped images and storing the information for up to 30 days. Investigators can then search that data without obtaining a warrant.
Supporters point to stolen vehicles, murder investigations, kidnappings, and violent crimes solved using the system.
But critics argue that while criminals may be the intended targets, everyone becomes part of the database.
Unlike traditional surveillance aimed at suspects, Flock's cameras indiscriminately record everyone who drives past them—workers heading to the office, parents taking children to school, churchgoers, medical patients, and ordinary citizens going about their daily lives.
Privacy advocates argue that no other form of surveillance in American history has made it so easy to reconstruct the movements of millions of people.
"We Don't Track People" — But Their Own Videos Say Otherwise
One of Flock's central talking points is that it does not track people.
Chief Communications Officer Josh Thomas maintained during the investigation that the company does not follow people's movements in the way critics describe.
Yet the company's own training webinars tell a different story.
In multiple instructional videos intended for law enforcement users, trainers openly discuss tracking vehicles "from location to location to location." Other presentations explain how users can "track your suspect's movements." In another example, an officer explained how investigators followed a suspect all the way into Kentucky using Flock cameras.
Critics argue that if officers are able to follow a suspect from one camera to another across state lines, then the distinction between "tracking" and "not tracking" becomes largely semantic.
Security researcher Benn Jordan said reconstructing 30 days of vehicle movements effectively creates a GPS history.
"If you were to build a graph and plot it on a map, now it's as if you've had a GPS on your car for an entire month," Jordan said.
The Condor Cameras: AI That Follows People
Perhaps even more controversial are Flock's newer Condor cameras.
Unlike traditional license plate readers, Condor cameras are pan-tilt-zoom systems equipped with artificial intelligence. Their purpose is to detect motion and physically follow activity in real time.
During demonstrations, the cameras automatically panned and tilted to keep a moving person centered in view.
Training videos describe Guardian Mode, which can alert users to human movement and "acquire and track" individuals as they walk.
Despite this, company representatives insisted the cameras are not actually tracking people.
To critics, watching a camera automatically follow a person while simultaneously hearing claims that the technology doesn't track anyone stretches credibility.
Jordan noted that these cameras appeared shortly after Flock publicly emphasized that its systems only photographed license plates and not people.
Security Researcher Discovers Live Public Camera Feeds
Adding to concerns, Jordan discovered dozens of Flock cameras that were openly streaming video over the internet without passwords.
Working alongside 404 Media, he found approximately 60 to 70 cameras that anyone with the proper tools could access.
The implications were unsettling.
Jordan said he watched a woman jogging alone on a wooded trail in Georgia. He watched people leave their homes in the morning. He was even able to download footage directly from one of the exposed cameras.
The footage wasn't found on the dark web.
According to investigators, it was publicly accessible.
Flock blamed Verizon, saying incorrect SIM cards with public IP addresses had been supplied, exposing the devices. The company said the issue was corrected immediately after discovery. Verizon did not publicly respond.
When Surveillance Becomes Personal
Civil liberties advocates have long warned that powerful surveillance systems eventually become tools for personal abuse.
Those fears have already materialized.
According to the report, police officers in several jurisdictions have been arrested after allegedly using Flock systems to stalk former romantic partners and love interests.
"What if an officer uses Flock cameras to stalk an ex?" Jordan asked.
"It's already happened."
Flock says its software maintains audit logs and that improper use can be detected.
But critics argue technology cannot eliminate human nature.
"People are going to abuse it," said software developer Will Freeman.
Citizens Begin Mapping the Cameras
Freeman has spent years doing something unusual—tracking the trackers.
From a coffee shop in Boulder, Colorado, he created DeFlock, a crowd-sourced database showing the locations and orientations of police surveillance cameras across the country.
So far, more than 88,000 cameras have been mapped.
The software can even recommend alternate driving routes that avoid surveillance cameras altogether. One route that normally took five minutes stretched to fourteen minutes when every camera was bypassed.
Freeman says his purpose isn't to help criminals.
His concern is transparency.
"No one's watching the watchers," he said.
Cities Are Starting to Reconsider
As privacy concerns grow, more than two dozen municipalities have begun reconsidering their relationship with Flock Safety. Denver is among the cities that have canceled contracts amid concerns about access to data and the expanding capabilities of the technology.
The debate increasingly pits two deeply held values against one another.
Supporters argue the cameras save lives and solve crimes.
Critics argue that constitutional rights are often surrendered gradually, one technological advance at a time.
And they warn that once mass surveillance infrastructure is normalized, it rarely shrinks—it expands.
The Bigger Question
At the heart of the controversy is a question larger than Flock Safety itself.
Americans have historically rejected the idea that the government should maintain detailed records of everyone's movements.
But technology has changed what is possible.
Today, artificial intelligence, automated cameras, searchable databases, and interconnected networks have created capabilities that previous generations could scarcely imagine.
Supporters call it modern policing.
Critics call it the architecture of mass surveillance.
And as more cities, lawmakers, and citizens grapple with the implications, one question remains unresolved:
Who watches the watchers—and what happens when the watchers can watch everyone?