Exposing Surveillance at the U.S.-Mexico Border: 2024 Year in Review in Pictures

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Some of the most picturesque landscapes in the United States can be found along the border with Mexico. Yet, from San Diego’s beaches to the Sonoran Desert, from Big Bend National Park to the Boca Chica wetlands, we see vistas marred by the sinister spread of surveillance technology, courtesy of the federal government.  

EFF refuses to let this blight grow without documenting it, exposing it, and finding ways to fight back alongside the communities that live in the shadow of this technological threat to human rights.  

Here’s a galley of images representing our work and the new developments we’ve discovered in border surveillance in 2024.  

1. Mapping Border Surveillance  

A map of the US-Mexico border, with dots representing surveillance towers.

EFF’s stand-up display of surveillance at the US-Mexico border. Source: EFF

EFF published the first iteration of our map of surveillance towers at the U.S.-Mexico border in Spring 2023, having pinpointed the precise location of 290 towers, a fraction of what we knew might be out there. A yearanda half later, with the help of local residents, researchers, and search-and-rescue groups, our map now includes more than 500 towers.  

In many cases, the towers are brand new, with some going up as recently as this fall. We’ve also added the location of surveillance aerostats, checkpoint license plate readers, and face recognition at land ports of entry. 

In addition to our online map, we also created a 10’ x 7’ display that we debuted at “This article has been indexed from Deeplinks

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