NYPD faces backlash as it prepares to encrypt radio communications
www.theguardian.com
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Critics say encryption is an ‘attack on transparency’, and that radio monitoring is one of the few ways to keep track of the police
Obinice
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They’re not encrypted? What? That’s a gigantic security hole.

Damn, are these guys up on modern tech or living in the 90s?

FartsWithAnAccent
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Regular police radio should not be encrypted. Police should not be operating under a cloak of secrecy especially in the US.

AirBreather
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Why are they encrypting their communications? Do they have something to hide?

If they’ve got nothing to hide, then they’ve got nothing to fear.

Or so I’ve heard, anyway, right?

@rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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They’re public employees. Their privacy is non-existent while on duty. There is actually no reason for police radios to be encrypted. The only reason police feel even a modium of responsibility to the public is because they are able to be constantly watched by citizens, and their unencrypted comms is an important part of that.

ETA: I get what you were saying and adding onto it, not trying to contradict

R0cket_M00se
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They currently aren’t hiding anything on the radio and are still getting away with the shit they’ve been doing since forever, hard to see this as actually being worse when the lack of encryption hasn’t lead to a perfectly transparent police force.

@IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world
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When I was in the USCG Auxiliary in Boston in the 90’s they used the same VHF radio as all boaters for most comms, but they also had an encrypted radio they could switch to if they needed to discuss anything sensitive. The encrypted radio was crap though and only worked over short distances. But they’d use it when relaying personal details of boats/people they stopped, dealing with drunk boaters, etc.

As time progressed they switched to using mobile phones when they wanted privacy. Cell coverage along the coast proved far better than the proprietary encrypted radio…

Aside from the transparency issue, did you see how much it’s going to cost?

Four hundred million dollars! The city is cutting back on pretty much everything else but wants to spend that on police radios.

Everyone has to tighten their belts while the thin blue line gets fatter and more dangerous.

@Mango@lemmy.world
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removed by mod

@ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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Yes, this is absolutely suspicious and definitely a sign of police overreach and government’s misplaced priorities.

But.

I do want to point out that, whenever a cop wants to do something shady right now, they don’t do it over the unencrypted radio. It’s not like we’re giving them a new way to be malfeasant. It’s not like they’re currently completely accountable and transparent, and they won’t be later.

Right now, they just use their cell phone when they want to do something shady.

@nodsocket@lemmy.world
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What is the purpose of encrypting comms?

To keep criminals from monitoring the police and getting a head start

@Dkarma@lemmy.world
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removed by mod

@atrielienz@lemmy.world
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Imagine an active shooter situation where the shooter was carrying or had access to a police scanner and could listen in on what they knew and their movements. I don’t like this idea because I think cops need more media scrutiny than less. But I do understand why it may be necessary in some scenarios.

Flying Squid
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This isn’t just bad news for citizen monitoring of the police, it’s bad news for the media as well. I worked at a news station. We had multiple police scanners going in case something big happened. The cops want no cameras around.

@sir_reginald@lemmy.world
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Capitalism is evolving into an almost worldwide police state.

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