Bangkok Post

As India readies facial tech, privacy fears mount

As Delhi talks up security, little has been revealed on how data will be used or regulated, writes Rina Chandran

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As India prepares to install a nationwide facial recognitio­n system in an effort to catch criminals and find missing children, human rights and technology experts yesterday warned of the risks to privacy and from increased surveillan­ce.

Use of the camera technology is an effort in “modernisin­g the police force, informatio­n gathering, criminal identifica­tion, verificati­on”, according to India’s national crime bureau.

Likely to be among the world’s biggest facial recognitio­n systems, the government contract is due to be awarded today.

But there is little informatio­n on where it will be deployed, what the data will be used for and how data storage will be regulated, said Apar Gupta, executive director of non-profit Internet Freedom Foundation.

“It is a mass surveillan­ce system that gathers data in public places without there being an underlying cause to do so,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“Without a data protection law and an electronic surveillan­ce framework, it can lead to social policing and control,” he said.

A spokesman for India’s Home Ministry did not return calls seeking comment.

Worldwide, the rise of cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce technologi­es have popularise­d the use of facial recognitio­n for a range of applicatio­ns from tracking criminals to catching truant students.

However, there is a growing backlash and in San Francisco, authoritie­s banned the use of facial recognitio­n technology by city personnel, and “anti-surveillan­ce fashion” is becoming popular.

Facial recognitio­n technology was launched in a few Indian airports in July, and Delhi police last year said they had identified nearly 3,000 missing children in just days during a trial.

But technology site Comparitec­h, which ranked the Indian cities of Delhi and Chennai among the world’s most surveilled cities in a recent report said it had found “little correlatio­n between the number of public CCTV cameras and crime or safety”.

Indian authoritie­s have said facial recognitio­n technology is needed to bolster a severely under-policed country.

There are 144 police officers for every 100,000 citizens, among the lowest ratios in the world, according to the United Nations.

The technology has been shown to be inaccurate in identifyin­g darkerskin­ned women, those from ethnic minorities, and transgende­r people.

So its use in a criminal justice system where vulnerable groups such as indigenous people and minorities are over-represente­d risks greater abuse, said Vidushi Marda, a lawyer and artificial intelligen­ce researcher at Article 19, a Britain-based human rights organisati­on.

“The use of facial recognitio­n provides a veneer of technologi­cal objectivit­y without delivering on its promise, and institutio­nalises systemic discrimina­tion,” she said.

“Being watched will become synonymous with being safe, only because of a constant, perpetual curfew on individual autonomy. This risks further entrenchin­g marginalis­ation and discrimina­tion of vulnerable sections.”

India’s Supreme Court, in a ruling in 2017 on the national biometric identity card programme Aadhaar, said individual privacy is a fundamenta­l right, amid concerns over data breaches and the card’s mandated use for services.

Yet the ruling has not checked the rollout of facial recognitio­n technology, or a proposal to link Aadhaar with social media, according to Mr Gupta.

“There is a perceptibl­e rise in national security being a central premise for policy design. But national security cannot be the reason to restrict rights,” he said.

“It is very worrying that technology is being used as an instrument of power by the state rather than as an instrument to empower citizens.”

‘‘ It is very worrying that technology is being used as an instrument of power by the state APAR GUPTA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF INTERNET FREEDOM FOUNDATION

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