Tech Wavo
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Computers
  • Gadgets
  • Mobile
  • Apps
  • News
  • Financial
  • Stock
Tech Wavo
No Result
View All Result

For One Glorious Morning, a Website Saved San Francisco From Parking Tickets

Tech Wavo by Tech Wavo
September 24, 2025
in Computers
0


He suspected this absurd-seeming pattern was due to limitations baked into the software used by parking control officers. Whatever its reason was for existing, the pattern of sequential ticket IDs, paired with parking officers likely claiming batches of ticket numbers, meant Walz was able to track their routes by plotting each parking ticket on a map as soon as it was entered into the system. A car owner could look at the activity of the officers currently out on patrol and see if any of them were slowly descending on their neighborhood.

Last year, parking officials in San Francisco issued over a million tickets within city limits, which amounted to over $100 million in fines for car owners. “I actually don’t have a car, but I have plenty of friends that talk about it,” says Walz. Like most costs in San Francisco, these tickets can quickly add up. For example, forgetting to move your car during the weekly street sweeping—an error my household has made more than once—will cost you $90 every time.

Dude, Where’s My Parking Cop?

The website’s live updates were pulled from the city government’s website and visualized on an Apple Map. “Find My Parking Cops” tracked the routes of individual parking control officers, giving them each unique visual identifiers, as well as their cadence of tickets.

On Tuesday, for example, the site displayed one officer seemingly starting their shift around 10:30 am and handing out 35 tickets over the next few hours as they patrolled a neighborhood in Lower Pacific Heights. The citations logged were primarily for expired meters, which cost $107 per ticket, and not having a residential permit, which cost $108 per ticket. In total, the fines racked up by that one officer over a few hours amounted to almost $4,000.

Who’s handing out the most tickets each week? Walz included a leaderboard on the website that ranked just how much in fines each officer handed out. While officers were only identified on the map by a number and their initials, their cumulative ticket cost was tracked. When WIRED was last able to check Walz’s website on Tuesday, the top fine giver had issued 157 tickets so far, handing out over $16,000 in fees for violations.

Prior to “Find My Parking Cops,” Walz created another San Francisco-specific website. This one used a phone, placed on a street corner in the Mission district, to identify what songs people were listening to in public. He then uploaded a live feed of the songs, captured and identified through the Shazam app, onto the “Bop Spotter” website. It provided a little peek into what neighborhood residents were bumping at the time while also slyly nodding at the abundance of surveillance in the city. He’s also previously built a site, called “IMG_0001,” to surface old YouTube clips uploaded by everyday people in the platform’s early days. Those grainy, private videos stand in stark contrast to the stuff that dominates the platform today.

The parking ticket tracker was another side project for Walz. “I worked in my free time on the weekends the last few weeks to make it happen,” he says.

While Walz’s websites sometimes come with a dose of social commentary, he didn’t envision this project as making some kind of grand, sweeping statement about parking tickets or what it means to drive in 2025. Rather, it’s another entry in his repertoire of cool websites powered by unique data sources.

“I’m not ‘pro’ parking cop. I’m not ‘anti’ parking cop,” says Walz. “It’s just data I was able to unearth, and I thought it would be cool to visualize it.”

And now it’s gone. Representatives for Apple did not respond to immediate requests for comment. I reached out to Walz after the city’s data feed was cut off, but he didn’t pick up.

Previous Post

These gorgeous and weird ultra-modern wooden wireless speakers are serious competition for Bang & Olufsen in the style stakes

Next Post

Ransomware chaos grows after Marks & Spencer breach, but HyperBUNKER’s radical diode vault shakes enterprise data protection assumptions

Next Post
Ransomware chaos grows after Marks & Spencer breach, but HyperBUNKER’s radical diode vault shakes enterprise data protection assumptions

Ransomware chaos grows after Marks & Spencer breach, but HyperBUNKER’s radical diode vault shakes enterprise data protection assumptions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

While you were distracted by the AirPods Pro 3, the Gen 2 model plummeted to just AU$310

by Tech Wavo
September 24, 2025
0
While you were distracted by the AirPods Pro 3, the Gen 2 model plummeted to just AU$310
Computers

In case you’ve been living under a rock these last few weeks, Apple has launched the AirPods Pro 3 as...

Read more

‘Marvel Zombies’ review: comic book giant’s new Disney+ show bites off more than it can chew in frightfully fun yet frustrating fashion

by Tech Wavo
September 24, 2025
0
‘Marvel Zombies’ review: comic book giant’s new Disney+ show bites off more than it can chew in frightfully fun yet frustrating fashion
Computers

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure...

Read more

How European battery startups can thrive alongside Asian giants

by Tech Wavo
September 24, 2025
0
How European battery startups can thrive alongside Asian giants
Technology

The global battery market is experiencing unprecedented growth, with projections showing the sector will reach $400bn by 2030. Yet European...

Read more

Economic Reforms in Germany Show Slow Impact

by Tech Wavo
September 24, 2025
0
Economic Reforms in Germany Show Slow Impact
Financial

Germany’s sweeping fiscal reforms and multibillion-euro investment pledges were once hailed as the catalyst that could revive Europe’s largest economy...

Read more

Site links

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Computers
  • Gadgets
  • Mobile
  • Apps
  • News
  • Financial
  • Stock