Earlier this year,robert c morgan the politics of eroticism for the first time (that we know of), a false match by a facial recognition algorithm led to the arrest of an innocent man.
Now, members of Congress are finally taking action. On Thursday, Sens. Ed Markey and Jeff Merkley, and Reps. Pramila Jayapal and Ayanna Pressley, all Democrats, introduced the Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act of 2020. It's the most aggressive move yet by Congress to limit the use of facial recognition by police, in this case, by banning federal law enforcement from using it and cutting off state and local police from federal grants if they fail to do the same.
That it was an innocent Black man who was falsely accused and arrested is not a surprise. A federal study published last year found that facial recognition technology misidentified Black and Asian faces 10 to 100 times more often than white faces.
The only “evidence” against Robert Julian-Borchak Williams, according to the New York Times, was an algorithm used by the Michigan State Police that matched his driver’s license photo with blurry surveillance footage. Police were sent to arrest a confused Williams on his front lawn, in front of his two young daughters and wife.
After spending $1,000 on bail and 30 hours in jail, Williams was released by the Detroit Police Department. When the cops realized their mistake, the Timesreports, a police officer said: “I guess the computer got it wrong.”
Yeah, the computer got it wrong.
George Floyd. Michael Brown. Eric Garner. The list of Black people killed by police is so long. Contrast that with the many incentives for people — tech CEOs hungry for lucrative contracts, politicians screaming "law and order," cops who want an easy fix — to push facial recognition technology. It's a terrifying and deadly combination.
SEE ALSO: Trevor Noah discusses the discrimination Black people face at workPutting pressure on corporations alone won't fix the problem. Amazon's "moratorium" on selling its facial recognition tech to police departments is vague and only lasts a year. IBM said it won't sell facial recognition tech to police, while Microsoft said it would institute a similar ban until federal laws regulating it were in place.
And there are plenty of other players in the industry. DataWorks Plus, which built the software that led to Williams' arrest and uses an algorithm cited in the federal bias study, says it "provides solutions" to "more than 1,000 agencies, both large and small." It doesn't have a public-facing consumer business to worry about. Neither does Clearview AI — yes, thatClearview AI, the creepy company that scraped billions of photos from social media networks without asking permission. Public outrage doesn't matter to them. They never promised to not be evil.
That's why lawmakers need to take action. The Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act of 2020 bans federal law enforcement from using facial recognition technology. It also prevents state and local law enforcement agencies from accepting federal grants if they use the technology.
The Electric Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a privacy and human rights non-profit, didn't think past bills, including the recently proposed Justice in Policing Act, went far enough to prohibit use of facial recognition technology. Jeramie D. Scott, senior counsel at EPIC, said they were "too limited in their reach" or had "wide-ranging exceptions." But it endorses the Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act.
So does Fight for the Future. The digital rights non-profit said in a statement the bill "effectively bans law enforcement use of facial recognition in the United States," andthat Congress should pass it"soon as possible." And the ACLU says the bill "should immediately pass."
Robert Williams survived his encounter with police. But the next facial recognition "match" might not.
Social media used to prove MH17 was downed by Russian Buk missileNurses in flooded Vietnam hospital had to catch eels swimming through corridorsLG V20 to start shipping in Korea this weekPepe the Frog cartoon added to online hate symbol databaseBlackBerry gives up on building phonesGet free burgers for life at this joint, if you get a tattoo of a burger that isDanny Brown released 'Atrocity Exhibition' early because he couldn't waitFleet Foxes frontman bestows his sweater upon a fan who made a Tumblr for itPeople asked Elon Musk some very bizarre questions at the SpaceX Mars event5 beautiful tributes to José Fernández from Monday night's game'Street Fighter V' Capcom Cup is coming to California in DecemberSomeone just bought the 'Dark Knight' batsuit for $250,000We need to talk about Colin Kaepernick becoming the 49ers starting quarterbackMashReads Podcast: How a professional book nerd approaches reading'Order a daddy' app lets you swipe for sperm donors, TinderCafe trolls Donald Trump with an unusual sandwich recipeAfter wildly popular premiere, 'This Is Us' returns with another big twistPeople asked Elon Musk some very bizarre questions at the SpaceX Mars eventMysterious 'Destiny' ARG solved, and it's part of a giant raid puzzleWells Fargo execs forfeit $60 million over account scandal Lena Headey on her work with refugees and what inspired her to share her #MeToo story New affordable 6.1 Cryptocurrency Tether accused of being a scam and pumping up Bitcoin U2 blasts Trump during Grammy's performance Kate Winslet admits to 'bitter regrets" after working with accused predators Why this Netflix Original is the Bonnie & Clyde of our generation 'Black Panther' currently winning most advance ticket sales for superhero movie Nintendo just announced that a Mario film is on the way Here's the piece of 'Black Mirror' tech people would be most likely to use Chrissy Teigen, John Legend donate $200,000 on behalf of U.S. gymnasts Peter Dinklage talks 'Game of Thrones,' Super Bowl ad Apple responds to U.S. government's investigation over slow iPhones Alexa is rooting for the Philadelphia Eagles in the Super Bowl Ola, Uber's biggest rival in India, expands to Australia Man writes heartfelt breakup letter to his gym to end his membership Elon Musk just sold $5 million worth of flamethrowers 'Game of Thrones' Season 8 set photo reveals potential spoiler Jamie Lee Curtis shared her first photo from the new 'Halloween' movie set Someone is already trying to stop sales of Elon Musk's flamethrower 'House of Cards' adds Diane Lane, Greg Kinnear for the show's final season
1.9377s , 8287.21875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【robert c morgan the politics of eroticism】,Pursuit Information Network