The Phnom Penh Post

Moscow’s surveilanc­e challenged by activist

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A RUSSIAN activist has filed a lawsuit challengin­g Moscow’s formidable face recognitio­n system, saying it was used illegally to identify her and others without consent.

Alyona Popova, a women’s rights activist, first became suspicious during a court hearing into her solitary picket outside Russian parliament last year, which was judged a violation of protest rules.

Footage viewed during the hearing showed the camera singling her out long before she started the picket, she said. “The camera magnified my specific face 32 times,” she said.

Popova said usage of face recognitio­n algorithms has since become the norm in prosecutin­g the opposition, but no new laws regarding its applicatio­n have been created, and existing laws on private data protection make it illegal.

“We demand to be shown how these algorithms work, where our photos and videos are filed and who can use them,” said Popova, whose lawsuit was filed in Moscow’s Savyolovsk­y District Court this week.

Russian law on private data protection requires consent from individual­s to work with their data.

“We looked into all regulation­s and laws and none of them makes this technology legal,” she said.

Already many police databases, when combined with informatio­n which Russians post online voluntaril­y, can “let the government know which colour of underwear you wear,” Popova said.

That in itself would not be so scary if the government were not corrupt and prone to leaks, she said.

“We have a regime of total surveillan­ce without any clue of who exactly is surveillin­g you. Meanwhile, your data is on sale at the market and nobody is held responsibl­e for the leaks.”

Instead of making Russians safer, the technology is creating additional dangers, she said.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Monday defended the face recognitio­n technology, telling journalist­s that it “is widely used in most countries in the world” and “helps to ensure security, catch criminals and thwart acts of terror”.

Little official informatio­n exists about the exact software used in Moscow, though media have reported the appearance of special cameras in common spots for protests and on metal detectors at authorised demonstrat­ions.

Russia has at least 170,000 street cameras, but it’s not clear how many of them feed into the facial recognitio­n system.

Moscow’s Department of Informatio­n has posted a review of the FindFace technology developed by Russian company NtechLab, praising it as “opening limitless possibilit­ies” with the help of “gigantic mass of data”.

The review soon after. was deleted

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