• Loading ...
  • Loading ...

Attractions Melbourne

Latest News Attractions Melbourne

Are you looking for a holiday? Get special deals.

Too loud? Ticket's in the mail

29 Mar 2026 By foxnews

Too loud? Ticket's in the mail
 

You already know about speed cameras. Red light cameras. Toll cameras that photograph your plate and bill you later.

Now meet their cousin. Noise cameras are the newest automated enforcement technology spreading through American cities. A pole-mounted device contains sensitive microphones paired with a license plate camera.

IF SOMEONE GETS INTO YOUR EMAIL, THEY OWN EVERY ACCOUNT YOU HAVE. THESE 3 MOVES LOCK THEM OUT FOR GOOD

Your car drives past. If your exhaust tips over the legal decibel limit, a ticket arrives in your mailbox days later. No warning. No officer pulling you over. No flashing lights in your rearview mirror. Just a microphone that never blinks, never takes a break and never misses a shift.

New York City has been running these since 2021. The cameras have issued more than 1,600 violations and collected nearly $2 million in fines. Get caught once, and you're looking at $800. Get caught repeatedly, and the fine climbs to $2,500.

Newport, Rhode Island, put two cameras on scenic Ocean Avenue. Within days, a Mustang GT got nailed at 85 decibels. Two decibels over the limit. $250 fine. Providence approved $180,000 to add cameras in 2026. Connecticut passed statewide legislation.

California has six cities running a five-year pilot program with fines up to $1,105. Chicago, Miami, Philadelphia, Sacramento and Washington, D.C., are all deploying or testing. Colorado, New Jersey and Hawaii have introduced similar legislation. This is not a local story anymore. It's a national one moving fast, and most drivers have absolutely no idea it's coming for them.

5 SIMPLE TECH TIPS TO TAKE BACK CONTROL OF YOUR SOCIAL MEDIA

Here's how the technology actually works. 

The microphone detects sound above the legal threshold, typically between 75 and 95 decibels, depending on the city. To put that in plain English, a normal conversation runs about 60 decibels. A lawnmower hits around 90. Most cities are drawing the line somewhere in between. The camera cross-references the sound spike with the exact moment a vehicle passes, photographs the plate, and generates the ticket automatically. No officer involved. No human review in most cases. Just math, a microphone and a camera pointed at your plate.

When I'm in my Porsche and flip into manual mode, rowing through the gears with that beautiful exhaust note singing, I'm not doing the math on that out loud. Let's just say I'm watching the camera location maps very carefully. You probably should, too.

Here's what should concern drivers with completely stock vehicles. That Mustang GT wasn't a tuned track car. It's a car you buy at a dealership. Two decibels over the limit. $250 gone. Motorcycles are even more exposed. A stock Harley-Davidson idles around 75 decibels and can hit 90 under acceleration. Well inside the danger zone in several cities already running cameras. You don't need a modified exhaust to get a ticket. You just need bad timing.

AI is being used to pinpoint which specific vehicle in a group triggered the alert. Not just the loudest car in the frame. Your car. The tech is getting smarter every single month.

DRONE FOOD DELIVERY LAUNCHES IN NEW JERSEY

There are two valid sides here.

If someone with a straight-pipe exhaust does a flyby past your bedroom at midnight, you're probably delighted they got caught. Noise pollution is a real health issue linked to sleep disorders, elevated blood pressure and anxiety. Cities have tried everything, and nothing worked at scale until now.

But this is also another layer of always-on surveillance that never forgets and never gives you the benefit of the doubt. Critics have raised legitimate questions about whether cameras get placed disproportionately in lower-income neighborhoods, turning a public health tool into a revenue machine aimed at the wrong zip codes. Fair questions worth asking out loud.

These cameras are spreading faster than most drivers realize. Search your city name plus "noise camera ordinance" to find the exact decibel limits where you live. Know the number before the camera does.

Send this to someone who is a car enthusiast, a motorcycle rider or anyone with a loud vehicle, before they find out the hard way. Consider it your good deed for the week.

Copyright 2026, WestStar Multimedia Entertainment. All rights reserved.

More News

Booking.com
Outraged passengers say parents ditched rowdy kids in coach while they upgraded to first class
Outraged passengers say parents ditched rowdy kids in coach while they upgraded to first class
Ancient 'seated' skeletons unearthed beneath modern school site, puzzling archaeologists
Ancient 'seated' skeletons unearthed beneath modern school site, puzzling archaeologists
'Charlie's Angels' star Cheryl Ladd defied producers with 'tiniest bikini ever' to make her point
'Charlie's Angels' star Cheryl Ladd defied producers with 'tiniest bikini ever' to make her point
Iran's supreme leader severely disfigured by US strikes: report
Iran's supreme leader severely disfigured by US strikes: report
New Zealand cyclist Kiaan Watts suspended after punching rival rider mid-race
New Zealand cyclist Kiaan Watts suspended after punching rival rider mid-race
Machete-wielding suspect claiming to be 'Lucifer' shot by police after allegedly stabbing 3 at transit hub
Machete-wielding suspect claiming to be 'Lucifer' shot by police after allegedly stabbing 3 at transit hub
'The Madison' star Elle Chapman says 8-mile hikes, horse rides in Montana kept her 'grounded'
'The Madison' star Elle Chapman says 8-mile hikes, horse rides in Montana kept her 'grounded'
Self-proclaimed 'prophet' with underage 'wives' exposed after couple he trusted helped uncover abuse ring
Self-proclaimed 'prophet' with underage 'wives' exposed after couple he trusted helped uncover abuse ring
As missiles light the sky, she boards a one-way flight to Dubai
As missiles light the sky, she boards a one-way flight to Dubai
Bryson DeChambeau implodes on 18th hole at the Masters with triple bogey to miss the cut
Bryson DeChambeau implodes on 18th hole at the Masters with triple bogey to miss the cut
Ann-Margret suffers painful injury in home accident at 84 years old
Ann-Margret suffers painful injury in home accident at 84 years old
How the 3,267th-ranked amateur golfer, a real estate agent, got to play alongside legends at the Masters
How the 3,267th-ranked amateur golfer, a real estate agent, got to play alongside legends at the Masters
From garden gnomes to mahjong sets, Masters tournament to rake in about $70M in merch
From garden gnomes to mahjong sets, Masters tournament to rake in about $70M in merch
Dem senator calls out far-left streamer, asks what 'normal' person would go on such an antagonistic show
Dem senator calls out far-left streamer, asks what 'normal' person would go on such an antagonistic show
NBA sees 168 players sit out of games due to illness, injury as playoffs approach
NBA sees 168 players sit out of games due to illness, injury as playoffs approach
Man climbs onto US military aircraft in Ireland, attacks it with hatchet: report
Man climbs onto US military aircraft in Ireland, attacks it with hatchet: report
Samsung Messages ending? What Android owners must know
Samsung Messages ending? What Android owners must know
'Peaky Blinders' star Tom Hardy spotted enjoying beach day in Barbados with wife during family vacation
'Peaky Blinders' star Tom Hardy spotted enjoying beach day in Barbados with wife during family vacation
Remove your personal info from the web - stop it from coming back
Remove your personal info from the web - stop it from coming back
Americans wait overnight for access to free healthcare as costs soar 'out of reach'
Americans wait overnight for access to free healthcare as costs soar 'out of reach'
Latest News

copyright © 2026 Attractions Melbourne.   All rights reserved.

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z