There are cameras positioned across America that photograph your license plate.
Not occasionally. Constantly. Every time you drive past one, it logs your plate number, your location, the direction you were heading, and the exact time. That data goes into a database. Sometimes it's law enforcement. Sometimes it's private companies. Sometimes it's both.
They're called ALPR cameras — Automated License Plate Readers. Most people have never heard of them. Most people drive past dozens of them every week.
DeFlock is a crowdsourced map that shows you where all of them are. Community-reported, continuously updated, covering thousands of locations across the United States. Zoom into your city and see how many are on your daily commute. The answer is almost always more than you expected.
There's also a route planner. Put in your origin and destination and DeFlock will calculate a path that avoids as many ALPR cameras as possible. Privacy-optimized routing, built on the same idea as traffic avoidance — except what you're avoiding is being logged.
This isn't a conspiracy site. It's a practical privacy tool built by people who believe you have the right to know when you're being tracked.
Open the map. Search your neighborhood.
Then decide how you feel about what you find.


