The Jerusalem Post

Microsoft to probe Israeli facial recognitio­n tech

AnyVision, founded with Microsoft investment, scrutinize­d for surveillan­ce of Palestinia­ns

- • By JEFFREY DASTIN

Microsoft Corp. has hired former US attorney-general Eric Holder to investigat­e whether the use of facial recognitio­n technology developed by an Israeli start-up it funded complies with its ethics principles, the company said on Friday.

AnyVision, based outside Tel Aviv, has come under scrutiny following reports by Haaretz’s

TheMarker business newspaper and NBC News that its technology is used to surveil Palestinia­ns who live in the West Bank.

AnyVision, which denied to NBC such use of its services, did not respond to a request for comment.

The probe reflects growing unease about facial recognitio­n surveillan­ce in the United States and elsewhere that civil liberties groups say could lead to unfair arrests and limit freedom of expression.

Microsoft announced facial recognitio­n ethics principles last year, saying the company would “advocate for safeguards for people’s democratic freedoms in law enforcemen­t surveillan­ce scenarios and will not deploy facial recognitio­n technology in scenarios that we believe will put these freedoms at risk.”

Microsoft said in a statement that Holder would lead a team from law firm Covington & Burling to conduct the probe. Holder, the top US legal official under former president Barack Obama, was hired by Uber Technologi­es Inc. in 2017 to review claims of sexual harassment.

He did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

M12, the venture fund of Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft,

participat­ed in a $74 million series A investment round that AnyVision announced in June.

NBC had reported that AnyVision’s technology was used within the West Bank and at Israeli border crossings. The company told NBC its software was not used for West Bank surveillan­ce and was deployed at border crossings in a manner similar to US Customs’ use of biometric identifica­tion at airports.

AnyVision in an August blog post also said that it would announce an ethics advisory board and that it had a responsibi­lity to prevent its technology’s abuse. At the same time, it touted how facial recognitio­n speeds up border crossings while helping law enforcemen­t spot criminals.

Microsoft itself markets a facial recognitio­n tool and backed a US Senate bill, announced on Thursday, that would require a court order before federal law enforcemen­t could use the technology for targeted, ongoing surveillan­ce.

Neema Singh Guliani, senior legislativ­e counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, said the bill “falls woefully short of protecting people’s privacy rights.” (Reuters)

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