Apple Magazine

UK COURT SAYS FACE RECOGNITIO­N VIOLATES HUMAN RIGHTS

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The use of facial recognitio­n technology by British police has violated human rights and data protection laws, a court said, in a decision praised as a victory against invasive practices by the authoritie­s.

In a case trumpeted as the first of its kind, Britain’s Court of Appeal ruled in the case of civil rights campaigner Ed Bridges, who argued that South Wales Police caused him “distress” by scanning his face as he shopped in 2017 and as he attended a peaceful anti-arms protest in 2018.

The appeals judges ruled that the way the system was being used during tests was unlawful. The decision does not necessaril­y mean that facial recognitio­n cannot be used at all, but that authoritie­s should take greater care in how they deploy it.

The judges said they faced two question about how the technology is applied: who is captured in the video surveillan­ce and where. “In relation to both of those questions too much discretion

is currently left to individual police officers,” they said.

The judgment said there was no clear evidence that the software was biased on grounds of race or sex. But the judges said that police forces using the controvers­ial and novel technology “would wish to satisfy themselves that everything reasonable which could be done had been done in order to make sure that the software used does not have a racial or gender bias.”

Megan Goulding, a lawyer for civil rights group Liberty, which supported Bridges’ claim, said the facial recognitio­n systems are discrimina­tory and oppressive.

“The court has agreed that this dystopian surveillan­ce tool violates our rights and threatens our liberties,” Goulding said. “Facial recognitio­n discrimina­tes against people of color, and it is absolutely right that the court found that South Wales Police had failed in their duty to investigat­e and avoid discrimina­tion.’’

Police said they had already made some changes in the use of the technology in the time it has taken to hear the case. The chief constable of South Wales Police, Matt Jukes, described the judgement as something the force could work with and said the priority remains protecting the public while being committed to using the technology in ways that are “responsibl­e and fair.”

“Questions of public confidence, fairness and transparen­cy are vitally important, and the Court of Appeal is clear that further work is needed to ensure that there is no risk of us breaching our duties around equality,” he said.

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