Important information - .

Ahead of Tuesday night’s New Year’s Eve celebration, the city of Las Vegas activated 22 new surveillance cameras along streets intersecting the Fremont Street Experience (FSE). These cameras actively scan for the license plates of stolen or wanted vehicles, notifying law enforcement when any matches are obtained.

AI renders a photo of license-plate cameras installed along a street dissecting the Fremont Street Experience. (Image: GROK2)

“The cameras will improve public safety during New Year’s Eve festivities and beyond,” according to a city press release.

The cameras cannot be used by police to monitor or punish traffic infractions, such as speeding or running red lights, the city claims.

Here s Looking at You

More than 300 video cameras already monitor the crowd underneath the FSE’s giant LED canopy, which is believed to draw millions of people annually.

In 2020, the FSE reportedly installed a multimillion-dollar gunshot detection system called ShotPoint. Developed by New Mexico tech company Databuoy, it integrated with the cameras already in place to provide law enforcement with real-time gunshot alerts.

Two years later, following two incidents of gun violence, FSE also Manufactured by a Vegas tech company called Remark Holdings, this automatically also uses the FSE’s cameras to scan crowds for signs of fire, intrusions, unattended bags, vandalism, graffiti, fights and loitering.

It is also used for crowd-counting and to analyze pedestrian traffic patterns.

According to the FSE, neither of these systems employs facial recognition software.

Share this article

Las Vegas Ride-Hailing Services Face ‘Severe’ Driver Shortage, Lyft Worker Blames Pay  Macau Casino Revenue Tops $2B in July, Best Month Since COVID-19 Pandemic  President Donald Trump Impeachment Odds, Once ‘Yuge,’ Lowered Bigly  Triple Crown Winner Justify Now Worth Estimated $75 Million, Racing Career Not Over, Says Trainer  North Carolina Online Sports Betting Provides Major Windfall for College Athletics  Boyd Gaming Wraps Up $170M Pala Interactive Acquisition  Planet Hollywood Sued Over Freaky Mannequin  Reno’s Grand Sierra Resort Agrees to $250K Settlement With Nevada Gaming Commission  Russian Gambler on Video Poisoning Parents May Have Killed More, Cops Say  June Gloom For MGM Springfield as Gaming Revenue Slumps 10.5 Percent From May, Second-Worst Month Since Opening