this post was submitted on 04 Jan 2024
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[–] [email protected] 3 points 10 months ago (16 children)

Cell phones are a common option.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (15 children)

Jesus. I can't believe they haven't encrypted sooner. "We have a situation here, wait let me call you."

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (14 children)

Why would the situation need to be kept private? “We have a jumper at this and this street”, “shots fired on scene”, “I ate a burrito.”

I’m honestly curious, what vitally secret info do you think needs to be communicated over radio? They aren’t for conversations.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I mean... Let's just take your example of "we have a jumper at x and y street". Is it really a good idea to have everyone know that? Do we want "journalists" to drive over their and take pictures of people in crisis (possibly worsening it).

Or let's imagine a car chase, do we really want criminals to know that a spikestrip is set up 2 streets ahead?

Do we want information like warrant and licence checks to be held over unencrypted radio transmitions. Allowing everyone who wants to to listen in and learn about people's criminal histories?

Just to add, I am aware that the whole idea of privacy isn't really a thing in the US, the names and mugshots of arrested people are literally made public in some (all?) states, so you probably don't care about the last point, but the rest still stand, and in lots of countries everyone's privacy is considered a right, including that of (suspected) criminals.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Is it really a good idea to have everyone know that?

It really doesn’t hurt.

Do we want "journalists" to drive over their and take pictures of people in crisis (possibly worsening it).

How is a journalist any different than a dozen randos posting it to TikTok? At least the journalist would be more likely to report facts instead of “#justdoit”.

Or let's imagine a car chase, do we really want criminals to know that a spikestrip is set up 2 streets ahead?

his isn’t usually a concern. Spike strips are set up pretty much only when the criminal has no other option. They aren’t done in a residential area where there are many side streets and turns, because it’s like trying to herd cats.

Most of the time in a chase, it’s info the criminal is already going to know. Where they are, what they are doing, etc. the cops don’t normally detail their plans on the radio, just communicate info.

Do we want information like warrant and licence checks to be held over unencrypted radio transmitions. Allowing everyone who wants to to listen in and learn about people's criminal histories?

This info is already public. You can literally just look it up on government sites. You can do that in many different countries, in fact. And I’d say that’s a good thing, actually. Why should we keep criminal activity private? How do we keep both citizens and government accountable if we aren’t open about what was done and the punishment received. Otherwise you can have people just disappear from the street into a jail cell, and the public have no way of ever knowing.

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