Community safety, in public

Watch out for each other.

Eagleye is a shared map of immigration-enforcement activity people see in public — built so your exact location and identity never have to leave your phone.

Free · no account · 11 languages

Purpose

What Eagleye is for

Eagleye lets neighbors share what they witness in public places, so communities can make informed, calmer choices about their day. Reports are deliberately coarse, short-lived, and confirmed by more than one person — it's a heads-up from your community, not a tracker.

What it is

  • A shared, real-time map of enforcement activity seen in public.
  • A way to give and get a heads-up among neighbors and allies.
  • Coarse by design — an approximate area and a rounded time.
  • Stronger when several people confirm the same thing.

What it isn't

  • Not for tracking, targeting, or identifying any individual.
  • Not surveillance, and not a place for personal details or rumors.
  • Not legal advice — and not a substitute for knowing your rights.
  • Not a reason to confront anyone or put yourself at risk.

Values

The principles it's built on

Eagleye is designed around a single assumption: the people using it may be at risk, so it should collect as little as possible and promise only what it can keep.

Community, not surveillance

It records activity in public, never people. There are no profiles, no watchlists, and nothing that points back to a person.

Your location stays yours

Your exact GPS never leaves your device. Only a coarse area — roughly a kilometer across — is ever shared.

Little to seize

Reports expire in about an hour. No accounts, no personal data, and no access logs — so there's very little to take, even if the server were seized.

Honest by design

Plain language and no inflated promises. Eagleye is general information, not legal advice — and it says so.

Free and open

No ads, no trackers, no cost. It's distributed outside the app stores too, so it can't be quietly pulled from under the community.

For everyone

Available in 11 languages and installable on any phone — no special hardware or know-how required.

How the location works Your phone figures out where you are, then rounds it to a coarse grid cell before anything is sent. The map shows the cell — not the pin — so a report can't be traced to a doorstep.

How to use

Using Eagleye, step by step

No sign-up, no setup. Open it in a browser or add it to your home screen and it works like an app.

1

Open the map

Go to oureagleye.com. On your phone, tap your browser's Share → Add to Home Screen to install it — it then opens full-screen like an app.

2

Find your area

Tap Use my location to center the map on your coarse area, or just pan and browse. Either way, the app only ever works with an approximate area.

3

Watch in public

Note enforcement activity you can see from a public place — a checkpoint, a raid, a patrol, an unmarked vehicle. Only report what you actually witness.

4

Report a sighting

Tap Report, choose the type, and drop the pin on the map — it snaps to a ~1 km area. You can add a photo; its metadata (including GPS) is stripped on your device first. Then Submit.

5

Corroborate

See a report that's still happening? Tap Still Here? to keep it live. Several independent confirmations raise its confidence; anything unconfirmed fades and disappears in about an hour.

6

Know your rights

Tap the ✋ rights card anytime for a plain-language summary of your rights — in your language, whether or not there's anything on the map.

The four report types

🛑
Checkpointa fixed stop on a road or transit point.
🚨
Raidan enforcement action at a site or workplace.
🚓
Patrolagents moving through an area.
🚗
Unmarked vehiclea vehicle spotted being used for enforcement.

Privacy & honesty

What we protect — and what we don't

Privacy claims are easy to make and hard to keep. Here is a straight account of both, so you can decide for yourself.

What it protects

  • Your exact location — it never leaves your device; only a coarse area is sent.
  • Your identity — no accounts, no phone or email, no personal data.
  • Your photos — location and metadata are stripped before upload; originals are never stored.
  • The record — the server keeps reports for about an hour and logs no IP addresses.

What to keep in mind

  • If your phone is taken, whatever is on it is on it — Eagleye can't protect the device itself.
  • It's general information, not legal advice, and reports can be wrong or outdated.
  • We make no "anonymous" or "encrypted" promise until an independent security review is complete.
  • Your safety comes first — observe from public spaces and never interfere.
A note on photos: before you add one, make sure it doesn't show faces, license plates, or anything that could identify you or others. The app strips technical metadata for you — but it can't remove what's in the picture.

Get started

Look out for your community

Open Eagleye in your browser, or add it to your home screen. It's free, and it's ready in your language.

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