License Plate-Scanning Company Violates Privacy of Millions of California Drivers, Argues Class Action
The 2021 lawsuit, given class-action status in September, alleges that Digital Recognition Network is breaking a California law meant to regulate the use of automatic license plate readers. DRN, a Fort Worth-based company, uses plate-scanning cameras to create location data for people’s vehicles, then sells that data to marketers, car repossessors and insurers.
What’s particularly notable about the case is the size of the class. The court has established that if you’re a California resident whose license plate data was collected by DRN at least 15 times since June 2017, you’re a class member. The plaintiff’s legal team estimates that the tally includes about 23 million people, alleging that DRN cameras were mounted to cars on public roads. The case website lets Californians check whether their plates were scanned.
Barring a settlement or delay, the trial to decide whether DRN must pay a penalty to those class members will begin on May 17 in San Diego County Superior Court…
The company’s cameras scan 220 million plates a month, its website says, and customers can use plate data to “create comprehensive vehicle stories.”
A lawyer for the firm representing class members told SFGATE Friday that his team will try to show DRN’s business is a “mass surveillance program.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.