The "permanent lineup" of the think tank at Georgetown University presents compelling cases as it monitors the police's face recognition software more strictly today. "According to the description of the New York Times, it is possible to regain national agencies through law enforcement agencies.
A 150 page report published by Georgetown University's Privacy and Technology Center on Tuesday [PDF link] shows that about half of the adult's face in the United States is stored in a face recognition database recognizable by federal, state, and local governments It showed that it is. Search for
The database is mainly from photos such as photos, drivers license pictures, passports, visa photos. Georgetown discovered that a quarter police department is using a face recognition database containing over 4,000 divisions. The database of FBI is many times larger than the database of the local police station, mainly created from images of non-criminals. That is, it is included in the face recognition database (unlike fingerprint and DNA databases), it is not reserved for criminal suspects.
Are you standing in the lineup? Most people may answer "no". This summer, the Government accountability office revealed that nearly 64 million Americans did not say anything about this matter. 16 states allow FBI to compare the face of suspicious criminal with driver's license and ID card picture. A virtual picture of the lineup of their state residents. In this lineup, it is not a person who points to a suspect - this is an algorithm
Law enforcement officers are aware of the risks to privacy, civil liberties, and citizens' rights.
A tool that can be used to protect people who have taken an oath. Face recognition for police
These risks are addressed by commonsense rules comparable to wiretapping prevention law. These reforms involve major actions by law enforcement agencies, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), facial recognition companies, and community leaders.
"PERPETUAL series: unrecognized police face recognition in the USA", October 18, 2016: perpetuallineup.org
Given the large number of DMV databases included in the US Georgia State University passport and the Visa holder database in the US Georgetown University estimated that nearly half of American adults entered at least half of the face recognition databases It is. . MorphoTrust (formerly OT - Morpho or Safran), a subsidiary of Idemia, is the largest face authentication and other biometric technology provider in the United States. We are designing systems for state DMV, federal and state law enforcement agencies, border control and airports (including TSA PreCheck) and state agencies. Other common suppliers are 3M, Cognitec, DataWorks Plus, Dynamic Imaging Systems, FaceFirst, and NEC Global.
Nearly half of the US police stations can use face recognition software to compare monitoring images with ID card photos or face photography databases. Some departments always use face recognition only to ascertain the identity of the suspect being detained and always analyze the lens of the camera to determine who is walking at a particular moment. Over 117 million American adults are receiving facial scanning systems. The authors of this study, Clare Garvie, Alvaro Bedoya, Jonathan Frankle, are trying to bridge the gap in the general knowledge about the existence of policies that limit how to use facial recognition techniques and how to use the police department. Several details on the use of facial scanning by FBI have been known for some time, but the scale of participation of local and state law enforcement agencies is beginning to be disclosed now.