- This has been an ongoing concern (internal surveillance of children and drivers, external of other traffic) for at least two months now:
* They're Putting AI Cameras In School Buses (April 7th 2026) - https://www.usermag.co/p/theyre-putting-ai-cameras-in-school
* School bus Driver Interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KoAvL1MoTIA
- Look up the history of this company, bus patrol - they're felons and in prison.
- I chaperoned a 7th grade field trip at the beginning of June 2026 and I have not been on a school bus for many years. As a serial technologist entrepreneur and technology platform creator this school bus was a mecca of tracking technology and I was taking photos from this limited time I was given riding in this mobile edge data collection vehicle which originally was only used to move kids to and from school. The bus had 11 cameras visible that I could see located on the inside and outside. Mounted on the ceiling above and to the left of the drivers head was a small locked mini rack that I assume was the consolidation point of all wires to a Digital Video Recorder. I could not determine, nor was informed, if this system is remotely accessible but it must be given the worlds appetite for "connected" which many believe means 'easy'.
I spoke to the bus driver and she informed me that she loves the cameras and that they have been used to suspend kids thus proving her innocents and have also been used by law enforcement 'looking' for things. She also told me of a unique case where a kid placed spikes under a bus tire and this kid got more than a suspension from his actions that the video recorded.
Interesting times where everything is being recorded however the context of a situation can obviously still be missing from any recorded evidence. Seems like everyone's privacy is just "flocked". ;)
by jessillions
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- I wish i still had the capacity to be surprised by anything
- Maybe design cities to be walkable and bikeable so that you have the option get things done without driving a car which is inherently trackable?
- People who pass through red signals need a night or two in jail, not enhanced privacy protections.
by josefritzishere
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- That's never going to be misused or anything... gross.
- Yes, this is concerning. But there's also the other side. Some of the little miscreants who shared my bus ride were positively nasty. Some surveillance would have helped a number of people avoid bullying.
- While I'm sympathetic to a lot of privacy concerns, how hard is it to simply not be an asshole and not pass school buses when they have their flashing lights out?
Also, every car with a dashcam or built in cameras is basically already this. Where I live every intersection has cameras. Most of the buildings. It's not like this is anything new and honestly, probably a better use of cameras than most of the other applications.
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- Judging by the enthusiasm for hosted AI models and tools like Claude Code on Hacker News, I don't think people care much about surveillance anymore.
- The existence of a license plate indicates that motor vehicle travel is not intended to be untrackable. That makes sense since these are powerful devices. It seems like a fair trade off since a motor vehicle provides many benefits but also high risk.