siliconwafer writes "The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is looking to acquire a vehicle license plate tracking system, to be used at the national level. According to the solicitation obtained by the Washington Post, commercial readers, supplied by a private company, would scan the plate of vehicles and store them in a "National License Plate Recognition" (NLPR) database. This is already being done at the state level, and privacy advocates are up in arms, with EFF and ACLU suing California over their automatic plate readers. Now that this has potential to become a broad and national program."
[ED Note: "Shortly after the Washington Post broke the story on the national plate reading system, it appears the DHS has shelved their plans for the tracking system, by order of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, at least in the interim."]
(Score: 2, Interesting) by hankwang on Sunday February 23 2014, @01:54PM
Unique? If you click a few pages on Wikipedia Category:Vehicle registration plates of the United States [wikipedia.org], that is not the impression that I get; for most states, there are several different color combinations depending on the year of issuing. Black or dark blue on white seems to be pretty common.
(Not a systematic search, just some random clicks).
Anyway, doing the recognition based on colors doesn't sound like a wise idea, since it should also work when it's dark (infrared flashlight). Recognizing small details might also be troublesome since there may be some motion blur.
Avantslash: Slashdot+SoylentNews for mobile [avantslash.org].
(Score: 2) by mhajicek on Sunday February 23 2014, @02:54PM
Thanks, I stand corrected.