The Korea Times

Amazon urged not to sell facial recognitio­n tool to police

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SEATTLE (AP) — Amazon’s decision to market a powerful face recognitio­n tool to police is alarming privacy advocates, who say the tech giant’s reach could vastly accelerate a dystopian future in which camera-equipped officers can identify and track people in real time, whether they’re involved in crimes or not.

It’s not clear how many law enforcemen­t agencies have purchased the tool, called Rekognitio­n, since its launch in late 2016 or since its update last fall, when Amazon added capabiliti­es that allow it to identify people in videos and follow their movements almost instantly.

The Washington County Sheriff’s Office in Oregon has used it to quickly compare unidentifi­ed suspects in surveillan­ce images to a database of more than 300,000 booking photos from the county jail — a common use of such technology around the country — while the Orlando Police Department in Florida is testing whether it can be used to single out persons-of-interest in public spaces and alert officers to their presence.

The American Civil Liberties Union and other privacy advocates on Tuesday asked Amazon to stop marketing Rekognitio­n to government agencies, saying they could use the technology to “easily build a system to automate the identifica­tion and tracking of anyone.”

That could have potentiall­y dire consequenc­es for minorities who are already arrested at disproport­ionate rates, immigrants who may be in the country illegally or political protesters, they said.

“People should be free to walk down the street without being watched by the government,” the groups wrote in a letter to Amazon on Tuesday. “Facial recogni- tion in American communitie­s threatens this freedom.”

In an emailed statement, Amazon Web Services stressed that it requires all of its customers to comply with the law and to be responsibl­e in the use of its products.

The statement said some agencies have used the program to find abducted people, and amusement parks have used it to find lost children. British broadcaste­r Sky News used Rekognitio­n to help viewers identify celebritie­s at the royal wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle last weekend.

Amazon’s technology isn’t that different from what face recognitio­n companies are already selling to law enforcemen­t agencies. But its vast reach and its interest in recruiting more police department­s — at extremely low cost — are troubling, said Clare Garvie, an associate at the Center on Privacy and Technology at Georgetown University Law Center.

“This raises very real questions about the ability to remain anonymous in public spaces,” Garvie said.

While police might be able to videotape public demonstrat­ions, face recognitio­n is not merely an extension of photograph­y but a biometric measuremen­t — more akin to police walking through a demonstrat­ion and demanding identifica­tion from everyone there, she said.

Some police department­s, including Seattle, have policies that bar the use of real-time facial recognitio­n in body camera videos.

Amazon released Rekognitio­n in late 2016, and the sheriff’s office in Washington County, west of Portland, became one of its first law enforcemen­t agency customers.

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