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Who Really Has Access to Your Flock Data?

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May 22, 2026
15 minutes to read
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Published:
May 22, 2026

When organizations evaluate security technology, one of the first questions they ask is also one of the most important: who can actually access the data? It is a fair question, especially for businesses and private organizations that want better visibility into incidents without giving up control of their information. With Flock, the answer is straightforward. You own your Flock camera data, and you decide who can access it. Flock does not sell your data, and no outside agency can view your information unless you choose to share it.

That means privacy starts with customer control. If you want to keep your data private to your organization, you can. If you want to share certain information to help support an investigation, that is also your choice. The important point is that data sharing is not automatic, open-ended, or hidden behind the scenes. Customers retain ownership, access, retention, and collaboration decisions, while the platform includes guardrails to support responsible data practices.

Does Flock sell your data?

No. Flock does not sell camera data to any third party.

That is one of the clearest answers organizations should have when they are researching security systems. Flock does not sell customer camera data, and the customer remains in control of who can access that information. This is a central part of how Flock approaches privacy, trust, and responsible use.

This matters because many questions about modern safety technology come down to ownership. If an organization installs cameras on its property, it should not lose control over what those cameras capture. With Flock, the customer owns the data, decides whether to share it, and can manage access based on its own policies and needs.

Can law enforcement access my Flock camera data?

Law enforcement cannot access your Flock camera data unless you choose to share it.

That is an important distinction. A common assumption is that installing camera technology creates some kind of default law enforcement access. Flock’s model is the opposite. No agency has access unless the organization intentionally grants it. If a customer decides to share data, that choice remains in the customer’s hands.

Just as important, that control does not disappear after sharing begins. Access can be revoked at any time, and shared data cannot be re-shared without permission. There is no open network and no blanket default access. Instead, organizations maintain direct control over their Flock camera data throughout the process. For companies that want useful security tools without sacrificing privacy or oversight, that control is the foundation of trust.

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