That's been the same frequent focus for some posts on this blog. Let's take a look at those first as a preamble to yesterday's report by Tim Cushing in https://www.techdirt.com/.
18 May 2019
Should We Worry About What's Next Here In Mesa?
From Fortune Magazine yesterday:
San Francisco Bans Facial-Recognition Tools for Its Police and Other City Departments
By Kartikay Mehrotra and Bloomberg May 14, 2019
(It all started with automated License-Plate Readers)
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TECHDIRT:
After Years Of Claiming It Doesn't Use Facial Recognition Software, The LAPD Admits It Has Used It 30,000 Times Since 2009
from the we-regret-the-repeated-errors dept
The Los Angeles Police Department apparently loves using facial recognition tech. It doesn't like talking about its love for this tech, though. It told the Georgetown Law Center on Privacy and Technology it had nothing to give the Center when it asked for its facial recognition tech documents.
The Los Angeles Police Department has repeatedly announced new face recognition initiatives—including a “smart car” equipped with face recognition and real-time face recognition cameras—yet the agency claimed to have “no records responsive” to our document request.
The LAPD flatly denied using the tech as recently as 2019.
"We actually do not use facial recognition in the Department," Rubenstein told the LA Times in 2019, adding an exception of "a few limited instances" where outside agencies used it during joint investigations.
Here's what the LA Times has discovered, thanks to public records that the LAPD finally decided to stop withholding.
The Los Angeles Police Department has used facial recognition software nearly 30,000 times since 2009, with hundreds of officers running images of suspects from surveillance cameras and other sources against a massive database of mug shots taken by law enforcement.
The new figures, released to The Times, reveal for the first time how commonly facial recognition is used in the department, which for years has provided vague and contradictory information about how and whether it uses the technology.
There's some technically true stuff in the LAPD's obfuscation. The LAPD does not have its own software. This makes it easier to claim it does not use the tech "in the Department." But the Department definitely uses the tech . . .
Unmasking the Realities of Facial Recognition
Is this something coming in the future, or is it being used now? . . .
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26 October 2018
China: facial recognition and state control | The Economist
Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: https://econ.st/2xvTKdy
Improving lives, increasing connectivity across the world, that's the great promise offered by data-driven technology - but in China it also promises greater state control and abuse of power.
This is the next groundbreaking development in data-driven technology, facial recognition. . .
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