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By Jessica Corbett, Common Dreams
Thousands of records about U.S. government involvement in the research and development of facial recognition technology — unveiled due to an American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) lawsuit and first reported on Tuesday by The Washington Post — fueled fresh calls for a federal ban on such tools.
“Americans’ ability to navigate our communities without constant tracking and surveillance is being chipped away at an alarming pace,” Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) told the Post. “We cannot stand by as the tentacles of the surveillance state dig deeper into our private lives, treating every one of us like suspects in an unbridled investigation that undermines our rights and freedom.”
While some cities and states have taken action, there is currently no federal law restricting the use of facial recognition tools. However, Markey pledged to reintroduce his proposed ban on government use of the technology — which he did, alongside Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and other Democrats, within hours of the reporting.
“The year is 2023, but we are living through 1984. The continued proliferation of surveillance tools like facial recognition technologies in our society is deeply disturbing,” declared Markey, reintroducing the Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act, which is backed by various groups including the ACLU.
“Biometric data collection poses serious risks of privacy invasion and discrimination, and Americans know they should not have to forgo personal privacy for safety,” the senator said. “As we work to make our country more equitable, we cannot ignore the technologies that stand in the way of progress and perpetuate injustice.”
Despite concerns about accuracy and bias — bolstered by examples of misidentified Black men being arrested for crimes they did not commit — the U.S. Defense Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) were more closely involved in work on facial recognition software to identify people from drone and street camera footage than was previously known, according to the documents revealed as a result of the ACLU’s public records lawsuit filed in late 2019.
The Post reported that documents including internal emails and presentations expose how intimately officials at the FBI — which is part of the Justice Department — and Pentagon “worked with academic researchers to refine artificial intelligence techniques that could help in the identification or tracking of Americans without their awareness or consent.”
Many of the records pertain to the Janus program, which was funded by the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Agency (IARPA) and ultimately folded into a search tool used by multiple federal agencies called Horus.
As the newspaper detailed:
“Program leaders worked with FBI scientists and some of the nation’s leading computer vision experts to design and test software that would quickly and accurately process the ‘truly unconstrained face imagery’ recorded by surveillance cameras in public places, including subway stations and street corners, according to the documents, which the ACLU shared with The Washington Post.
“In a 2019 presentation, an IARPA program manager said the goal had been to ‘dramatically improve’ the power and performance of facial recognition systems, with ‘scaling to support millions of subjects’ and the ability to quickly identify faces from partially obstructed angles. One version of the system was trained for ‘Face ID… at target distances’ of more than a half-mile.
“To refine the system’s capabilities, researchers staged a data-gathering test in 2017, paying dozens of volunteers to simulate real-world scenarios at a Defense Department training facility made to resemble a hospital, a subway station, an outdoor marketplace, and a school, the documents show. The test yielded thousands of surveillance videos and images, some of which were captured by a drone.”
“IARPA said in public filings that the Janus program had helped advance ‘virtually every aspect of fundamental face recognition research’ and led to algorithms that were ‘twice as accurate as the most widely used government-off-the-shelf systems,'” the Post noted.
Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy director of the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, told the newspaper that the tool’s use in U.S. mass surveillance would be a “nightmare scenario.”
“It could give the government the ability to pervasively track as many people as they want for as long as they want,” he said. “There’s no good outcome for that in a democratic society.”
Originally published by Common Dreams.
Jessica Corbett is a staff writer for Common Dreams.
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The letter agencies have been using facial recognition for over 30 years. In the early years it was a slow process that could only handle one or two faces at a time. The programs that run it have gotten better and the computers that run the programs have gotten faster. What has changed the most is not the use of facial recognition but the ability of the user to link a face to so much more information. With social media, digital health, banking, and property & business filings all being instantly available the feds can immediately link a face to a complete history. Soon to be added carbon tracking, vaccine passports, and social scores.
Not a conspiracy theory. Fact.
These people couldn't manage a McDonalds and they think they can control the world with sketchy technology like facial recognition and DNA ananlysis that rarely delivers as promised....