The fight against mass surveillance is a nationwide effort. The links below connect you to trusted organizations working to document, challenge, and limit surveillance overreach — from legal groups litigating Fourth Amendment cases to researchers tracking the spread of automated license plate readers across the country.
These tools highlight platforms and projects used by DeFlock Atlanta and aligned groups to track surveillance infrastructure, share public records insights, and support community oversight efforts.
A public-facing transparency registry that surfaces records and recent submissions related to surveillance, policies, and public documents.
Independent analysis of Flock transparency-portal data, including usage patterns and network-level visibility into how the system is being used.
Tracks local government meetings where ALPRs, Flock, facial recognition, and other surveillance technologies may be discussed, so communities can show up before expansion happens.
EFF’s searchable database documenting surveillance technologies used by law enforcement across the United States, including ALPR systems.
The Institute for Justice’s ALPR-focused project centered on litigation, advocacy, and constitutional challenges to warrantless license plate reader surveillance.
A public-facing tool that helps people understand whether their plate may have been searched in the Flock ecosystem and links out to additional surveillance resources.
These organizations work on digital privacy, surveillance oversight, litigation, research, public education, and grassroots resistance to mass data collection.
EFF defends privacy and free expression and also operates major anti-surveillance resources, including Atlas of Surveillance and Surveillance Self-Defense.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center focuses on privacy, freedom of expression, and democratic values, with ongoing work around surveillance and privacy in public spaces.
The ACLU litigates and advocates against surveillance overreach, with dedicated privacy and surveillance work spanning local, state, and federal systems.
S.T.O.P. litigates, researches, and advocates against discriminatory surveillance while pushing for stronger local and state oversight.
A digital-rights organization mobilizing artists, engineers, activists, and technologists against oppressive technology and surveillance harms.
Lucy Parsons Labs investigates and educates around surveillance overreach by governments and corporations, with a strong focus on community harm and accountability.
We welcome press inquiries, public records leads, and community members looking to take action. Reach out — we'd love to hear from you.