MIT Technology Review » Artificial Intelligence 09月26日 02:13
Flock Safety 扩展无人机服务至私营安保领域
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Flock Safety,此前主要为警方提供服务,现已将其无人机技术扩展至私营安保领域,旨在帮助企业,特别是零售商,打击盗窃行为。企业可在其 premises 部署 Flock 的无人机停靠站,并在获得FAA的视线外飞行许可后,由安保团队操控无人机进行监控。该系统可用于追踪嫌疑人及其车辆,并将视频信息传输给公司安保团队或直接发送给警方。尽管尚未签署大型零售商合同,Flock已与一家番茄加工商达成合作,并计划推广至医院、仓库及能源设施等领域。此举引发了关于隐私和过度执法的担忧,ACLU批评此举加剧了第四修正案保护的侵蚀。

Flock Safety将曾用于警方执法的无人机技术引入私营安保市场,允许企业在其自有场所部署无人机停靠站,以应对如零售盗窃等安全挑战。企业在获得FAA的视线外飞行许可后,其安保人员即可操控无人机执行监控任务,实现对嫌疑人及其交通工具的追踪。

该无人机系统能够实现“警报式”响应,当触发安保警报时,无人机便可从停靠站起飞,追踪目标。视频画面可供公司安保团队查看,也可选择自动传输给当地警方,从而提供快速的现场视觉信息支持,类似于警方部署无人机的模式。

Flock Safety正积极与大型零售商洽谈合作,并已与一家番茄加工商达成协议,将其无人机服务推广至医院、仓库及油气设施等多种私营部门。然而,FAA关于视线外飞行的新规草案可能影响其部分使用场景,且此举引发了关于隐私和潜在过度执法的担忧。

ACLU等隐私倡导组织对Flock Safety的私营安保扩张表示担忧,认为这可能加剧对个人隐私的侵蚀,并可能助长政府通过购买私营数据来规避获取搜查令的限制,进一步削弱第四修正案的保护。

Once reserved for police departments, Flock Safety is now offering its drones for private-sector security, the company announced today, including for businesses intent on curbing shoplifting. 

Companies in the US can now place Flock’s drone docking stations on their premises. If the company has a waiver from the Federal Aviation Administration to fly beyond visual line of sight (which are becoming easier to get), its security team can fly the drones within a certain radius, often a few miles. 

“Instead of a 911 call [that triggers the drone], it’s an alarm call,” says Keith Kauffman, a former police chief who now directs Flock’s drone program. “It’s still the same type of response.”

Kauffman walked through how the drone program might work in the case of retail theft: If the security team at a store like Home Depot, for example, saw shoplifters leave the store, they could activate the drone, equipped with cameras, from its docking station on the roof.

“The drone follows the people. The people get in a car, you click a button,” he says, “and you track the vehicle with the drone, and the drone just follows the car.” 

The video feed of that drone might go to the company’s security team, but it could also be automatically transmitted directly to police departments.

The company says it’s in talks with large retailers but doesn’t yet have any signed contracts. The only private-sector company Kauffman named as a customer is Morning Star, a California tomato processor that uses drones to secure its distribution facilities. Flock will also pitch the drones to hospital campuses, warehouse sites, and oil and gas facilities. 

It’s worth noting that the FAA is currently drafting new rules for how it grants approval to pilots flying drones out of sight, and it’s not clear if Flock’s use case would be allowed under the current proposed guidance.

The company’s expansion to the private sector follows the rise of programs launched by police departments around the country to deploy drones as first responders. In such programs, law enforcement sends drones  to a scene to provide visuals faster than an officer can get there. 

Flock has arguably led this push, and police departments have claimed successes, like a supply drop to a boy lost in the Colorado wilderness. But the programs have also sparked privacy worries, concerns of overpolicing in minority neighborhoods, and lawsuits, charging that police departments should not block public access to drone footage. 

For its other technologies, like license plate readers, Flock has drawn recent criticism for the ease with which federal US immigration agencies, like ICE and CBP, could look at data collected by local police departments amid President Trump’s mass deportation efforts.

Flock’s expansion into private-sector security is “a logical step, but in the wrong direction,” says Rebecca Williams, senior strategist for the ACLU’s privacy and data governance unit. 

Williams cited a growing erosion of Fourth Amendment protections—which prevent unlawful search and seizure—in the online era, in which the government can purchase private data from companies that it would otherwise need a warrant to acquire it. Proposed legislation to curb that practice has stalled, and Flock’s expansion into the private sector would exacerbate the issue, Williams says.

“Flock is the Meta of surveillance technology now,” Williams says, referring to how much personal data Meta has acquired and monetized. “This expansion is very scary.”

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Flock Safety 无人机 私营安保 零售盗窃 隐私 第四修正案 Flock Safety Drones Private Security Retail Theft Privacy Fourth Amendment
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