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Originally published on Livestream.com on October 16, 2015 at 08:22 AM CDT Nearly every day brings a report of a new technology for tracking people in public places, or a new way of deploying a known technology. Surveillance cameras, license plate readers, cell phone trackers, GPS devices, drones, body cameras – the list keeps growing. Join our panel for a discussion of the constitutional, policy, and practical questions raised by these technologies, including: When should a warrant be necessary for location tracking – and are there some methods of tracking that should never be used? How does long-term location tracking affect First Amendment rights, and how should that play into the analysis? Do biometric recognition technologies change the whole game? Lauren Williams, Tech Reporter, Think Progress (moderator); Rachel Levinson-Waldman, Senior Counsel, Brennan Center for Justice; Nick Selby, CEO and Co-Founder, StreetCred and Investigator, Midlothian Police Department; Juval Scott, Attorney Advisor, Training Division, Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts Note: The description was truncated due to length limitations. Original event caption: "Spying in Public: Policy and Practice"