🚗 Tip suverenity #32: Tvoje auto je sledovací zařízení. Neregistruj ho na sebe.
Čtečky SPZ: na policejních autech, na dálnicích, u vchodů do obchodů i na mýtném. Tiše skenují každou značku, kterou vidí. Každé přečtení má čas, polohu a je uloženo do centrální databáze.
🚗 Sovereignty Tip #32: Your car is a tracking device. Do not register to your name.
Every time you leave your driveway, the surveillance begins.
License plate readers: mounted on police cruisers, highway gantries, shopping mall entrances, and toll booths. They silently scan every plate they see. Each read is timestamped, geotagged, and uploaded to a centralized database within seconds. Not sometimes. Every time.
In the US, networks like Flock Safety and Motorola's LEARN system have built a near-continuous surveillance mesh.
In the UK, the National ANPR Service processes over 50 million plate reads per day. This isn't a future threat. This is today's infrastructure.
And toll cameras? They're not just checking if you paid.
They log your entry point, exit point, the time between them. Every highway journey you make is reconstructed and stored as a movement record tied directly to your registered identity.
Now ask yourself:
→ Do you know where your plate data is stored?
→ Do you know who can access it?
→ Do you know if it's been shared with federal agencies, border control, or private insurance investigators?
→ Do you know if it crossed a border?
Most people have no idea. And that's by design.
Here's what makes this dangerous: your license plate is an instant identity anchor. A plate scan is automated, and directly linked to your name, home address, etc...
Private companies like Flock Safety and Vigilant Solutions have built commercial ALPR databases. Billions of plate reads, searchable, sold as subscription access to law enforcement, HOAs, repo companies, and private investigators. No warrant needed. No notification to you. Your movement history is a product being bought and sold right now.
What the sovereignty-minded person does differently:
→ Never register a vehicle in your own name. Use a company, LLC, legal proxy. This forces anyone tracking you to pierce a legal entity before reaching your identity: an extra layer that stops casual surveillance.
→ Understand that in most developed countries such as US, UK, EU ALPR networks are dense, interconnected, and feed into systems you have no visibility into. You are being monitored. The question is only whether it can be traced back to you.
→ Recognize the structural advantage of low-surveillance jurisdictions. The camera infrastructure is sparse, databases are fragmented and poorly maintained, and vehicle registrations can point to proxy addresses without raising flags.
The car you drive in your own name, in a developed country, on a toll road is one of the most surveilled objects in your daily life.
At minimum: break the link between the plate and your name.
Sovereignty isn't just financial. It's knowing who is watching you move and making sure they can't find your name when they look.