I understand you may be from a field where supporting software from the 70s is required, however someone is probably paying big bucks for that software as well. Replacing the software you work on might cost millions, replacing a thermostat costs 300 usd.
I would love to live in a world where software support lasts 70 years. But consumers don’t look at software support, so it’s not budgeted in the price, and thus doesn’t happen in the consumer space. Getting 16 years in a consumer device is long.
In the field you’re working, stability, longevity, and robustenes is probably a requirement, not a nice to have.
So the very first assertion the article makes is that this creates a giant database of sensitive information (presumably the license plates).
That’s just straight up not true? How can you write an article about this and make such a basic wrong assertion.
Any reasonable system would work as such: Scan plate -> is it allowed to be here? -> if noy store violation, if yes don’t send data
EDIT:
It seems like they really do be scanning every single license plate and storing it for no reason.