The surveillance state is massive – and expanding:
In Los Angeles, Flock deploys thousands of license-plate readers and other cameras — and it shares that footage with the Department of Homeland Security to make it easier for the government to monitor communities and chill protest. In cities like Washington, D.C., police offer rebates and sometimes free camera installation to residents who share their personal footage with law enforcement. Meanwhile, Atlanta has the highest number of cameras per capita of any city in the country.1
Government officials and private companies present surveillance tools as necessary crime-prevention and public-safety mechanisms. Here’s the truth: These are invasive technologies that violate people’s privacy — and circumvent people’s First and Fourth Amendment rights.
We are joining together to fight government spying and the corporate collection and sale of our most sensitive data.
Enough is enough.
Our government should not be spying on us, plain and simple. Add your name to tell our leaders to preserve our right to privacy and reject the surveillance state.
1. “Atlanta’s ‘Cop City’ Makes a Black Neighborhood a Testing Lab for AI Policing,” Capital B, April 22, 2026; “California Is Installing ICE AI Surveillance Tools as Trump Goes After Your Civil and Constitutional Rights,” L.A. Taco, April 29, 2026