The US Border Patrol has launched a sweeping surveillance program that tracks millions of American drivers, monitoring their movements, habits, and associations. The program uses license-plate readers to collect data on individuals who pass by certain locations, including areas near the Mexican border. This information is then fed into an algorithm that flags "suspicious" routes, speed patterns, and travel patterns, which local police are alerted to.
As a result, drivers have been stopped at traffic stops for minor infractions such as tinted windows, air fresheners, or speeding by just a fraction of a mile. In some cases, individuals were searched and arrested without any evidence of contraband being found. Internal group chats obtained through public records requests reveal that Border Patrol agents and local police are sharing information about US citizens' personal lives, including hotel reservations, rental car status, home addresses, and social media activity.
The program has raised concerns over Fourth Amendment rights, with legal experts describing it as a "dragnet" that tracks Americans' movements, associations, and daily routines without their consent. The scale of the program is unprecedented, with thousands of plate-reader sites across the country capturing data on US citizens far beyond the border.
In related news, Microsoft has thwarted a record-breaking cloud-based Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attack, which was launched against a single Azure endpoint in Australia and peaked at 15.72 Tbps. The attack originated from the Aisuru botnet, a Turbo-Mirai-class IoT network of compromised home routers, cameras, and other devices.
The SEC has dropped its remaining claims against SolarWinds over a historic 2020 hack that compromised the company's Orion software and triggered widespread breaches across government and industry. The agency's lawsuit had already been mostly dismantled by a federal judge in 2024.
Additionally, the FBI has accessed messages from a private Signal group used by New York immigration court-watch activists, labeling them as "anarchist violent extremist actors" despite no evidence of violence or harm being intended. This revelation raises concerns over civil liberties and the chilling effect on protected political activity.
As a result, drivers have been stopped at traffic stops for minor infractions such as tinted windows, air fresheners, or speeding by just a fraction of a mile. In some cases, individuals were searched and arrested without any evidence of contraband being found. Internal group chats obtained through public records requests reveal that Border Patrol agents and local police are sharing information about US citizens' personal lives, including hotel reservations, rental car status, home addresses, and social media activity.
The program has raised concerns over Fourth Amendment rights, with legal experts describing it as a "dragnet" that tracks Americans' movements, associations, and daily routines without their consent. The scale of the program is unprecedented, with thousands of plate-reader sites across the country capturing data on US citizens far beyond the border.
In related news, Microsoft has thwarted a record-breaking cloud-based Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attack, which was launched against a single Azure endpoint in Australia and peaked at 15.72 Tbps. The attack originated from the Aisuru botnet, a Turbo-Mirai-class IoT network of compromised home routers, cameras, and other devices.
The SEC has dropped its remaining claims against SolarWinds over a historic 2020 hack that compromised the company's Orion software and triggered widespread breaches across government and industry. The agency's lawsuit had already been mostly dismantled by a federal judge in 2024.
Additionally, the FBI has accessed messages from a private Signal group used by New York immigration court-watch activists, labeling them as "anarchist violent extremist actors" despite no evidence of violence or harm being intended. This revelation raises concerns over civil liberties and the chilling effect on protected political activity.