The portal, which has been in operation for the last 20 months, is said to cut the amount of work for police forces to gather evidence against dangerous drivers.
If you did your homework and knew what you were talking about, you'd work out that all of the tours and appointments we're going to see are school based,' he said. The database is said to have dramatically cut the amount of work police need to put in to review dashcam footage and decide whether someone has been driving dangerously.
Around 10,000 cases of dangerous driving captured on dashcams have been uploaded to a police database designed to prosecute careless motorists in the last 20 months. It's estimated the previous method of receiving, viewing and processing footage of dangerous driving provided by other motorists would take around 14 hours per video.
It estimates that more than three million road users use a dash or helmet
free cam website currently, which were originally designed to help motorists in insurance claim disputes. Nextbase told BBC Inside Out that footage of 10,000 incidents have been uploaded to police forces around the country in the first 20 months, and claim that half have resulted in some form of 'police action'.