NYPD 'abuses' facial recognition tech [www.itpro.co.uk]
The Man Behind San Francisco’s Facial Recognition Ban Is Working on More. Way More. [www.nytimes.com]
Report: NYPD Used Celebrity Images, Including Woody Harrelson, In Facial Recognition Dragnets [gothamist.com]
Surprise! Police are allegedly abusing facial recognition software [www.theinquirer.net]
A patriot. https://t.co/V8jePxt5jH
— Ida Bae Wells (@nhannahjones) May 16, 2019
Disappointing to see how ai facial recognition is being used. Also - “beating the data until it confesses” is an amazing turn of phrase I will be stealing https://t.co/tHAFGM3dR0
— 313 Ventures (@313V) May 16, 2019
“The desire not to be tracked when you walk down the street or watch-listed by a secret algorithm, these are shared values across the US...We fully expect this vote & this ordinance to inspire other communities to take control of these important decisions”https://t.co/luLWY8iVQV
— Local Progress (@LocalProgress) May 16, 2019
Good dude.https://t.co/eOriCYcnVe
— Jim Harper (@Jim_Harper) May 16, 2019
How a soft-spoken paralegal killed facial recognition surveillance in San Francisco. https://t.co/FpdB2ekJRZ
— Brent Staples (@BrentNYT) May 16, 2019
“My primary concern is when the state abuses its power, and because of the age we live in, it’s probably going to occur through technology and data mining” https://t.co/DfOSsA4eHS
— Alondra Nelson (@alondra) May 16, 2019
After San Francisco banned government use of facial recognition surveillance, two state legislators in New York have introduced a bill that would ban the use of facial recognition surveillance by landlords. https://t.co/HmCwfN6VF5
— Adam Levin (@Adam_K_Levin) May 17, 2019
If you haven’t yet, read @ClareGarvie & @lauramoy's work on facial recognition tech in law enforcement for @GeorgetownCPT. They’re easily two of the most important and revealing stories of all the things I've consumed today. https://t.co/jbz169dpO2 https://t.co/Tzym2O1ZPG
— Davey Alba (@daveyalba) May 16, 2019
The @nytimes profiles one of the most effective (and relentless) privacy and civil rights activists in the country: @b_haddy.
— Alvaro Bedoya (@alvarombedoya) May 18, 2019
(Funders, check out his new organization, @SecureJustice.)https://t.co/uYMi4V3IBX
I love to see people silently do the work @b_haddy is an example of someone doing the work. AI Governance is dominated by people with no receipts ......so excited to learn more about the national implications of his work https://t.co/aXp5WRucCw
— Mutale Nkonde (@mutalenkonde) May 18, 2019
Brian Hofer is a hero who fights for #Privacy & against abuse of #Surveillance-technologies!He is responsible for the #Face #Recognition ban in San Francisco!A man who drafted several privacy laws which all were approved! I see parallels to @echo_pbreyer https://t.co/4Sd8krudBB
— AG Kommunikation (@AG_KOMBB) May 16, 2019
Good dude.https://t.co/eOriCYcnVe
— Jim Harper (@Jim_Harper) May 16, 2019
“The desire not to be tracked when you walk down the street or watch-listed by a secret algorithm, these are shared values across the US...We fully expect this vote & this ordinance to inspire other communities to take control of these important decisions”https://t.co/luLWY8iVQV
— Local Progress (@LocalProgress) May 16, 2019
How a soft-spoken paralegal killed facial recognition surveillance in San Francisco. https://t.co/FpdB2ekJRZ
— Brent Staples (@BrentNYT) May 16, 2019