Existing laws adequately cover the South Wales police force’s deployment of the technology in a trial, two judges said, in what’s believed to be the world’s first legal case on how a law enforcement agency uses the new technology. The decision comes amid a broader global debate about the rising use of facial recognition technology. Recent advances in artificial intelligence make it easier for police to automatically scan faces and instantly match them to “watchlists” of suspects, missing people, and persons of interest, but it also raises concerns about mass surveillance.
“The algorithms of the law must keep pace with new and emerging technologies,” Judges Charles Haddon-Cave and Jonathan Swift said. Ed Bridges, a Cardiffresident and human rights campaigner who filed the judicial review, said South Wales police scanned his face twice as it tested the technology — once while he was Christmas shopping in 2017 and again when he was at a peaceful protest against a defense expo in 2018.
This story is from the September 07, 2019 edition of Techlife News.
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This story is from the September 07, 2019 edition of Techlife News.
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