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Fusus, a surveillance program that would have allowed police to access business surveillance cameras with the owner’s permission, failed by just one vote in December. Skip to content WKRN News 2 ...
Dearborn City Council approves a $720,000 contract for a surveillance video system with Axon's Fusus. Civil liberties advocates have expressed concern over whether videos in the Fusus program ...
On First Reading: Fusus and Historic Zoning Bill Move Forward ... Once you set up a system like this, you can’t control what it’s used for, no matter how many “guardrails” you put in place.
Axon Fusus now offers the ability to search, stream and act on vehicle data in real time—all from a single, connected view. Whether it’s a full license plate or a unique attribute, ...
The FUSUS system is a real-time crime center where dispatchers can see street cameras at intersections, Flock license plate reading cameras, see locations of 911 calls and officer locations.
Fusus also offers devices that allow businesses to integrate their security systems with the Fusus platform, giving police direct access to the cameras' livestream footage under certain circumstances.
A hotly debated $774,900, 34-month contract with law enforcement surveillance company Fusus narrowly failed to earn adoption at Tuesday's Metro Council meeting, after nearly a year of uncertainty ...
Fusus’s technology allows police to tap into live feeds from public and privately owned surveillance cameras. In Toledo, Ohio, cops use the power to watch one particular type of location.
FUSUS is program backed by Metro Police but panned by civil liberties advocates, and the question of whether to allow the program to continue is coming up for a vote Tuesday night.
To pass the controversial FUSUS surveillance program 21 council members needed to vote in favor. Only 20 members did so. “It is for many council members a hard decision. People care about Nashville.
Metro Council and members of the public continued a months-long contested discussion of the Fusus camera network at a meeting Tuesday night before they adjourned mid-debate due to inclement snowy ...
A measure to give Metro Nashville Police access to private security cameras failed by just one vote. The vote only added to the larger conversation for license plate readers.