can facial recognition fit with a fair society?
7:25:28 2018-05-28 915

By: Rory Cellan-Jones, BBC, Technology
 

Computers are getting ever better at recognising different faces - but on BBC's Tech Tent they ask whether facial recognition technology is just too big a threat to privacy.

That is certainly the view of the American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU.

This week the rights group urged Amazon to stop providing its Rekognition facial recognition technology to American police forces, saying a guide for the software "reads like a user manual for authoritarian surveillance".

Amazon responded robustly, saying the quality of life would be much worse if new technologies were blocked because of how they might be used.

False start

But Matt Cagle, technology and civil liberties lawyer for the ACLU in California, says the tech firm has unlocked something really dangerous: "This technology can be turned against protesters - it can be targeted at immigrants, and it can be used to spy on entire neighbourhoods."

He says Amazon needs to be far more transparent about its work in this area and there needs to be a public debate before the technology is deployed.

Another civil liberties group, Privacy International, claimed recently that the technology was unreliable. Its report found that two British police forces had seen a rate of false positives - people wrongly identified by the system as being on police files - of more than 90%.

But police forces on both sides of the Atlantic believe facial recognition is improving rapidly and can be a useful tool in areas such as safeguarding major events or spotting terror suspects on the move.

Of course, there are places where this debate is just not happening. China is investing big sums in facial recognition technology and deploying it with enthusiasm. Police there have used the technology to arrest a number of suspects at pop concerts.

The argument from the technology companies and law enforcement agencies in the US and Europe is that they must at least experiment in this area or risk ceding the ground to Chinese firms, which will not face the same pressure from civil liberties groups.

Mind you, Amazon may not be the best-placed business to win trust for this technology. The news that one of its Echo devices somehow managed to record a conversation in a family home and send it to someone else will reinforce the idea that it is a little too interested in watching our every move.

Forgive Others   2025-07-23
Reality Of Islam

A Mathematical Approach to the Quran

10:52:33   2024-02-16  

mediation

2:36:46   2023-06-04  

what Allah hates the most

5:1:47   2023-06-01  

allahs fort

11:41:7   2023-05-30  

striving for success

2:35:47   2023-06-04  

Imam Ali Describes the Holy Quran

5:0:38   2023-06-01  

livelihood

11:40:13   2023-05-30  

silence about wisdom

3:36:19   2023-05-29  

Gold remains perfectly solid wh

read more

MOST VIEWS

Importance of Media

9:3:43   2018-11-05

Illuminations

friendship

2:42:26   2023-02-02

do not burn out

2:34:48   2022-01-18

pure nature

7:34:7   2023-02-28

abbas-ibn-firnas

3:42:22   2021-12-24

humanity

6:28:21   2022-12-20

noah & his ark

7:59:14   2018-06-21



IMmORTAL Words
LATEST How Can You Save Your Marriage? Interpretation of Sura Hud - Verses 111-113 Importance of Patience in the Light of Traditions Just One Diet Soda a Day May Raise Your Type 2 Diabetes Risk by 38% Gold Does Something Unexpected When Superheated Past Its Melting Point Scientists Found a Mysterious Barrier in The Ocean That Jellyfish Will Not Cross Take Responsibility for Your Choices Interpretation of Sura Hud - Verses 108-110 Patience in Islamic Codices Study Reveals the Shocking Amount of Plastic We Breathe in Every Day Third Phase of AI Is Here. Here is How Agents May Impact Our Lives. Yellowstone Aspen Forests Are Already Responding to The Return of Wolves