Police and private security firms are routinely using facial recognition – but who, asks Stewart Mitchell, is checking it’s being used legally?
Tracking citizens via face recognition was once a dystopian fantasy – now the tech is advancing so fast it is being deployed without a proper legal checks That’s the opinion of privacy advocates Big BrotherWatch (BBW), which has taken theMetropolitan Police to court over its trials of technology that uses live video footage of public spaces to identify passers-by against a “watch list” of people of interest.
“The police are using live facial recognition to subject every passer-by to a highly invasive biometric identity check, akin to a fingerprint or DNA check, often without their knowledge or consent,” BBW’s legal and policy officer, Griff Ferris, told PC Pro. “Despite the lack of any legal basis for the use of this authoritarian technology, and despite significant concerns that its use infringes people’s human rights, the Metropolitan Police has announced it plans to use live facial recognition several more times this year. We’re hoping the court will intervene to stop this lawless technology.”
While it’s sometimes tempting to dismiss privacy groups as reactionary, many organisations are concerned about the unfettered rise of face recognition, including one of the watchdogs charged with overseeing deployments.
“The shortcoming in terms of the legislation is the question of legality,” Tony Porter, the government appointed Surveillance Camera Commissioner, told us.
“On the one hand, the state will claim it’s operating under common law for policing purposes and therefore the use of technology is entirely appropriate.
“The opposing view is that common law provides none of the protections that are outlined within the European human rights articles, so it doesn’t provide a clarity in law under which the police or the state ought to be able to protect themselves.”
This story is from the November 2018 edition of PC Pro.
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This story is from the November 2018 edition of PC Pro.
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