The Palm Beach Post

ACLU rips Amazon over ID system

Law enforcemen­t agencies use facial recognitio­n for surveillan­ce.

- By Spencer Soper

Amazon.com drew the ire of the American Civil Liberties Union on Tuesday over a facial-recognitio­n system offered to law-enforcemen­t agencies that the advocacy group says can be used to violate civil rights.

In marketing materials obtained by the group, Amazon Web Services said its Rekognitio­n system uses artificial intelligen­ce to quickly identify people in photos and videos, enabling law enforcemen­t to track people.

“Amazon’s Rekognitio­n raises profound civil liberties and civil rights concerns,” the group said in a statement.

“Today, the ACLU and a coalition of civil rights organizati­ons demanded that Amazon stop allowing government­s to use Rekognitio­n.”

Law enforcemen­t agencies in Florida and Oregon are using the service for surveillan­ce, according to the ACLU. The group used public records requests to learn about the service.

Government use of facial-recognitio­n software has raised concerns among civil rights groups that maintain it can be used to quiet dissent and target groups such as undocument­ed immigrants and black rights activists. Some AI software that’s used for facial recognitio­n has been shown to be racially biased because it was trained using images with relatively few minorities included.

“When we find that AWS services are being abused by a customer, we suspend that customer’s right to use our services,” Amazon said in an emailed statement. “We require our customers to comply with the law and be responsibl­e when using Amazon Rekognitio­n.”

The company said “various agencies” have used Rekognitio­n to find abducted people, without providing specific examples. Amusement parks use Rekognitio­n to find lost children, while the recent British royal wedding used Rekognitio­n to identify attendees, it added.

Oregon’s Washington County sheriff ’s office wants to use the system to scan some 300,000 booking photos from its jail that it has compiled since 2001, according to records obtained by the ACLU.

A marketing presentati­on by Amazon’s cloud-computing business indicated the Rekognitio­n system can slash the time it takes to identify individual­s in photos and video surveillan­ce.

The company’s technology does it in minutes versus days when images are sent to different law-enforcemen­t agencies for manual review, according to the marketing documents obtained by the ACLU.

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