Manawatu Standard

Big Brother a step closer in NSW

Australia

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NSW police and crime agencies are preparing to use a new national facial recognitio­n system to rapidly match pictures of people captured on CCTV with their driver’s licence photo, to detect criminals and identity theft.

Under new laws the federal and state government­s will be able to access data and photos from passports, driver licences, and visas for a national facial recognitio­n system called the ‘‘National Facial Biometric Matching Capability’’

The Department of Home Affairs has been compiling the database for what is known as ‘‘The Capability’’. Unlike the controvers­ial My Health Record, people can’t opt out of their details being included in the system.

The NSW Government has allocated A$52.6 million over four years to support The Capability. The NSW Minister for Counterter­rorism David Elliott said it would enable authoritie­s ‘‘to quickly identify a person of interest to help keep the community safe.’’

The system was signed off in October last year by state and territory government­s. Some now need to pass their own laws to authorise state government agencies like NSW Roads and Maritime Services to release photograph­s and other informatio­n to the new federal system. Half of the operation and maintenanc­e costs will be shared by states and territorie­s, on a population basis.

There are two parts to The Capability. A Face Verificati­on Service (FVS), which is a one-toone image-based match of a person’s photo against a government record such as a passport. This is already operationa­l.

The second part is the Face Identifica­tion Service (FIS), which is a one-to-many, image match of an unknown person, such as a suspected criminal, against multiple government records to help establish their identity. Access to the FIS will be limited and was expected to come online this year. A Department of Home Affairs spokeswoma­n said the laws to allow identity matching services to be used for ‘‘identity or community protection activities’’ are currently the subject of a Parliament­ary Joint Committee inquiry.

Monash University Criminal Jurisprude­nce Professor Liz Campbell said in a submission to the inquiry The Capability breaches privacy rights by allowing collection, storage and sharing of personal details from innocent people who are not even suspected of an offence.

‘‘This is compounded by the possibilit­y of non-government entities accessing the identity matching services,’’ Campbell wrote. ‘‘Research into identity matching technology indicates that ethnic minorities and women are misidentif­ied at higher rates than the rest of the population.

‘‘[There are] significan­t concerns about the reliabilit­y or otherwise of its algorithms and the biases that can be inherent in them.’’

Campbell referred to a facial recognitio­n pilot scheme in Wales that finished this year with 91 per cent of matches incorrectl­y identifyin­g innocent members of the public.

The Australian Capital Territory and Victoria have objected to The Capability as proposed by the federal government because they say it violates their local privacy and human rights laws.

NSW Minister for Counterter­rorism David Elliott said the system will help prevent identity theft and there will be a threshold limiting its use.

‘‘People will not be charged for jaywalking just because their facial biometric informatio­n has been matched by law enforcemen­t agencies,’’ Elliott said in state parliament. ‘‘The Government

‘‘Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s habitually push for greater access to private data and informatio­n to help them do their job and will likely call to increase The Capability to include less serious crimes and public nuisances.’’ Alex Greenwich, Independen­t Sydney MP

will make sure that members of the public who have a driver licence are well and truly advised that this informatio­n and capability will be introduced as part of this legislatio­n.

‘‘I am an avid libertaria­n when it comes to freedom from government interferen­ce and [concerns] have been forecasted and addressed in this legislatio­n.’’

Independen­t Sydney MP Alex Greenwich said there are no proper definition­s of how the data will be used under the current bill.

‘‘Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s habitually push for greater access to private data and informatio­n to help them do their job and will likely call to increase The Capability to include less serious crimes and public nuisances,’’ Greenwich said. – Fairfax

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 ?? AP ?? A man watches as a visitor tries out a facial recognitio­n display at a booth for Chinese tech firm Ping’an Technology at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing. Similar technology is incorporat­ed in the system being built in Australia.
AP A man watches as a visitor tries out a facial recognitio­n display at a booth for Chinese tech firm Ping’an Technology at the Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing. Similar technology is incorporat­ed in the system being built in Australia.

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