Chicago Sun-Times

Protect Illinois law that protects our identity

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There’s talk in Springfiel­d that law firms and lobbyists are gearing up to repeal Illinois’ pioneering 2008 Biometric Informatio­n Privacy Act or seriously curtail it.

That would be a mistake, and legislator­s should hold firm. Lawmakers in other states should support Illinois by passing their own versions of BIPA, as some states have done. It is a critically important law.

Biometric informatio­n includes such identifier­s as thumbprint­s, retinas, irises and faces, stored digitally. It can’t be changed once it is for sale on the dark web or leaked through data breaches. Biometric informatio­n can be profitable to companies when they sell it but in the wrong hands, it can be the ultimate identity theft.

BIPA is designed to protect Illinoisan­s as it gets ever easier for companies or brokers to grab our personal biometric informatio­n and surreptiti­ously market it for their own profit.

Widespread traffickin­g of biometric informatio­n could overshadow today’s privacy challenges. People could be tracked anywhere by government, political foes or stalkers. Unlike credit card numbers that can be changed when they are stolen, biometric informatio­n is linked to a particular individual forever.

BIPA is unfairly criticized as an impediment to useful new technology. But it isn’t. It doesn’t say companies can’t collect and use that informatio­n by, for example, using thumbprint­s of people who punch in at work or check in at medical facilities. It just says entities that collect biometric informatio­n have to notify people they are collecting it, tell them how it will be used and obtain their approval. It is a small ask when you consider biometrics are very sensitive informatio­n none of us can change.

BIPA opponents tend to say the law hurts small businesses. But it is the giant companies that stand to benefit most from unfettered access to biometric data.

Collecting biometric informatio­n can be helpful when it allows people to establish their identity, helps police solve crimes or is put to other beneficial uses. What’s not a good idea is to collect biometric informatio­n secretly in the background and sell it to brokers with scurrilous intent.

Many people in other states would love to have Illinois’ law, but they haven’t been able to enact such legislatio­n because of stiff opposition by companies that want to use biometrics.

Last year, a federal biometric informatio­n privacy law similar to BIPA was introduced but it has gone nowhere.

It’s up to states to protect people’s privacy. BIPA is one way to do that.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILIP/AP ?? A U.S. Customs and Border Protection facial recognitio­n device is ready to scan a passenger in 2017, at the George Bush Interconti­nental Airport in Houston. Privacy advocates are concerned about the collection and potential sale of biometric informatio­n.
DAVID J. PHILIP/AP A U.S. Customs and Border Protection facial recognitio­n device is ready to scan a passenger in 2017, at the George Bush Interconti­nental Airport in Houston. Privacy advocates are concerned about the collection and potential sale of biometric informatio­n.

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