Houston Chronicle

Microsoft also holding up on facial recognitio­n

- By Matt O’Brien

Microsoft has become the third big tech company this week to say it won’t sell its facial recognitio­n software to police, following similar moves by Amazon and IBM.

Microsoft’s president and chief counsel, Brad Smith, announced the decision and called on Congress to regulate the technology during a Washington Post video event Thursday.

“We’ve decided we will not sell facial recognitio­n technology to police department­s in the United States until we have a national law in place … that will govern this technology,” Smith said.

The trio of tech giants is stepping back from law-enforcemen­t use of systems that have faced criticism for incorrectl­y identifyin­g people with darker skin.

Ongoing protests following the death of George Floyd have focused attention on racial injustice in the U.S. and how police use technology to track people.

But while all three companies are known for their work in developing artificial intelligen­ce, including face recognitio­n software, none is a major player in selling such technology to police.

Smith said Thursday that Microsoft currently doesn’t sell its face recognitio­n software to any U.S. police department­s. He didn’t say if that includes federal law enforcemen­t agencies or police forces outside the U.S.

Several other companies that are less well known dominate the market for government facial recognitio­n contracts in the U.S., including Tokyo-based NEC and the European companies Idemia and Gemalto.

Microsoft, Amazon and IBM are calling on Congress to set national rules over how police use facial recognitio­n — something that’s now being considered as part of a police reform package sparked by the protests following Floyd’s death.

“If all of the responsibl­e companies in the country cede this market to those that are not prepared to take a stand, we won’t necessaril­y serve the national interest or the lives of the black and African-American people of this nation well,” Smith said. “We need Congress to act, not just tech companies alone.”

Microsoft has spent two years warning of the potential dangers of face-scanning technology being abused to enable oppressive mass surveillan­ce, but the company has opposed outright bans on government use of the technology passed in San Francisco and other cities.

That’s led to criticism from groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union, which says Microsoft is lobbying for weak regulation­s that could end up legitimizi­ng and expanding police use of facial recognitio­n.

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