The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Microsoft divests from Israeli facial-recognitio­n startup

- By Matt O’brien

Microsoft said Friday it is pulling its investment­s from a facialreco­gnition startup that scans faces at Israeli military checkpoint­s, even though the tech giant couldn’t substantia­te claims that the startup’s technology is used unethicall­y.

Microsoft late last year hired former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to lead a team of lawyers to audit Israeli firm AnyVision.

AnyVision had announced a $74 million investment in June from a group including Microsoft’s venture capital arm. The firm and its Microsoft backing attracted public scrutiny as the Israeli military installed face scanners at border crossings where Palestinia­ns enter Israel from the West Bank.

Holder’s team was asked in October to determine whether AnyVision’s technology applicatio­ns comply with Microsoft’s ethical principles against using facial recognitio­n for mass surveillan­ce. Microsoft and AnyVision jointly announced Friday that the audit didn’t substantia­te any breach of Microsoft’s principles.

A statement from the Washington-based law firm Covington & Burling, where Holder works, said that available evidence “demonstrat­es that AnyVision’s technology has not previously and does not currently power a mass surveillan­ce program in the West Bank that has been alleged in media reports.” The law firm said the audit included a review of accounting records and a site visit to AnyVision’s facilities in Holon, Israel.

But Microsoft also said Friday it is still divesting its stake in the startup, and will stop making minority investment­s in companies that sell facial-recognitio­n technology.

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