The Guardian (USA)

San Francisco is first US city to ban police use of facial recognitio­n tech

- Kari Paul and agencies

San Francisco supervisor­s have voted to make the city the first in the United States to ban police and other government agencies from using facial recognitio­n technology.

Supervisor­s voted eight to one in favor of the “Stop Secret Surveillan­ce Ordinance”, which will also strengthen existing oversight measures and will require city agencies to disclose current inventorie­s of surveillan­ce technology.

Supervisor Aaron Peskin, who championed the legislatio­n, said: “This is really about saying: ‘We can have security without being a security state. We can have good policing without being a police state.’ And part of that is building trust with the community based on good community informatio­n, not on Big Brother technology.”

Two supervisor­s were absent for Tuesday’s vote. The board of supervisor­s is expected to vote on the new rules a second time next week, when they are expected to pass again.

Critics argued that police need all the help they can get, especially in a city with high rates of property crime. That people expect privacy in public space is unreasonab­le given the proliferat­ion of cellphones and surveillan­ce cameras, said Meredith Serra, a member of a resident public safety group Stop Crime SF.

But those who support the ban say facial recognitio­n technology is flawed and a serious threat to civil liberties.

Matt Cagle, a technology and civil liberties attorney at the ACLU of Northern California, said the legislatio­n was a positive step towards slowing the rise of technologi­es that may infringe on the rights of people of color and immigrants. “Face surveillan­ce won’t make us safer, but it will make us less free,” Cagle told the Guardian after the proposal passed a committee vote last week.

The ordinance applies to a wider range of technology, including automated license plate reading and gunshot-detection tools. It also expands a 2018 law requiring the San Francisco public transporta­tion system Bart to outline how it surveils passengers.

Speaking to the Guardian last week, Peskin said the new regulation­s were designed to address concerns about the accuracy of technology and put a stop to creeping surveillan­ce culture.

He said: “We are all for good community policing but we don’t want to live in a police state. At the end of the day it’s not just about a flawed technology. It’s about the invasive surveillan­ce of the public commons.”

 ??  ?? Backers of the ban say facial recognitio­n threatens civil liberties. Photograph: Alamy
Backers of the ban say facial recognitio­n threatens civil liberties. Photograph: Alamy

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