Rotorua Daily Post

Big Brother is watching, right up in your face

Smile you’re on covert TV, facial recognitio­n technology fears

- Dawn Picken

On a recent night, around 9pm, two men in utes faced off in the middle of a Pa¯pa¯moa street. “Why don’t you use a f***ing indicator?” shouted the bloke who had watched the other driver stop in the middle of the road without signalling. After exchanging more choice words, the two utes sped off, one trailing the other.

“Where’s a cop when you need one?” I thought. By the time I called for an officer, the screaming idiots would be long gone. Times like these, I wonder whether CCTV cameras would have captured a number plate.

Research released yesterday and reported by RNZ says the Government now has the infrastruc­ture for mass or targeted surveillan­ce using facial recognitio­n technology (FR).

Without major interventi­on any framework to control facial recognitio­n technology “cannot hope to engender public confidence that its use is fair and lawful”, the study said.

We already know Big Brother is watching.

Tauranga City owns more than 400 CCTV cameras, a small percentage of which focus on parking. Parking officers can view offences following a complaint and use footage to issue tickets.

Earlier this year, parents at Tauranga Primary School complained after CCTV footage was used to issue citations for parking infringeme­nts.

A school newsletter notified parents of the installati­on of CCTV cameras on 5th and 6th Avenues by the Tauranga City Council, along with the traffic infringeme­nt fines parents could be charged.

A parent who got a $60 fine for parking behind the kerb told

NZME, “We’re being treated like a bunch of 15-year-olds . . . We have to pick our kids up from school so we have to park somewhere.”

Cities throughout Aotearoa use thousands of these cameras. Police say CCTV footage helped solve the murder mystery of British backpacker Grace Millane after her disappeara­nce in 2018.

Last month, an official informatio­n request resulted in New Zealand Police releasing informatio­n it was trialling facial recognitio­n technology, in addition to investigat­ive tools such as drones that can send live footage to patrols, a superfast system to spot suspects in CCTV feeds and a cellphone scourer with facial recognitio­n capability, according to RNZ.

NZME reported Commission­er Andrew Coster ordered a stocktake in May after RNZ exposed that police had trialled an algorithm that searches social media for face matches without telling the Government, the Privacy Commission­er or the public.

Digital tracking expert Dr Andrew Chen, a research fellow at Koi Tu¯, the centre for informed futures, said the new report lacked critical detail.

“The stocktake shows that there are awhole bunch of different projects that police have been working on, these new technologi­es that they’ve been utilising, that we haven’t really heard much about in the past,” Chen said.

On the plus side, facial recognitio­n could catch the thugs who stole tools from your work van; or the rageaholic who punched your son outside a bar.

But lack of regulation— the fact laws lag behind technology— is troubling. It means we don’t know how our data will be used and whether we have any recourse if we feel we’ve been wronged.

Will we get a citation for every parking infraction? Will Artificial Intelligen­ce recognise what we buy and where (without use of a loyalty card), and send our data to corporates so they can find new targets for their products? Would facial recognitio­n be used during any future lockdown to ensure we’re not gathering with people outside our bubbles?

Under current legislatio­n, we don’t know. We can’t rely on the goodwill of the Government, local councils and police to do the right thing. Past experience tells us mistakes will happen, as will abuse.

When it comes to policing, associate law professor at Victoria University of Wellington Nessa

Lynch said the use of FR is controvers­ial worldwide. Writing in August for The Spinoff, she said, “Unlike other biometric indicators used in policing, such as DNA and fingerprin­ts, automated collection and matching of facial images is generally not covered by legislatio­n. Facial images may be collected at a distance, without the person’s consent or even their knowledge.”

Lynch says identity matching happens in myriad ways, from matching existing police databases, other state databases, private sector supplied images or opensource data.

“As my research collaborat­ors have found, the use of live automated FRT in public places has significan­t implicatio­ns for privacy rights as well as concerns around a chilling effect on rights to freedom of expression and lawful protest,” she writes.

As FR use grows, it’s easy to imagine a New Zealand where some of us decide not to turn out for an event for fear our face will be used in ways we don’t know about, understand or agree with.

We need laws protecting our likenesses from misuse and giving us redress if we feel our rights have been violated.

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 ?? PHOTO/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Research says the Government now has the infrastruc­ture for mass or targeted surveillan­ce using facial recognitio­n technology.
PHOTO/ GETTY IMAGES Research says the Government now has the infrastruc­ture for mass or targeted surveillan­ce using facial recognitio­n technology.
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