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Canada should limit police use of facial recognition technology, say privacy commissioners

Parliament should limit Canadian police use of facial recognition technology to closely defined circumstances such as serious crimes, the country’s federal, provincial, and territorial privacy commissioners said today. Their statement was released as three commissioners testified this morning before Parliament’s privacy committee, which has been examining the use and impact of facial recognition. The parliamentary hearings on facial recognition came after federal privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien and the privacy commissioners of British Columbia and Alberta found last year that the RCMP violated federal and provincial private-sector privacy laws by using the facial recognition solution from Clearview AI. Clearview’s use of scraped images of people from the internet without permission is unlawful under Canadian law, the commissioners found. The RCMP disagrees with that report. Clearview AI has stopped offering its service in Canada. However, it is challenging the commissioners’ order that it stop the collection and use of Canadians’ data or delete images already collected. The commissioners held a national consultation on the use of facial recognition last year after releasing the Clearview report. However, they said, there was no consensus among the public groups and police forces who participated. As a result, the commissioners said today Parliament should either adopt a framework or pass a law based on four key elements: Appropriate limits on authorized uses should also include restrictions on the creation and use of databases of facial images in facial recognition initiatives, the commissioners said. If police in Canada are authorized to use any such databases, they added, the authorization should be clearly defined and narrow in scope, and it should require that the personal information within the database was collected lawfully. Currently the use of facial recognition is bounded by the Charter of Rights, provincial and federal privacy legislation, and the common law. Facial recognition “can be acceptable for serious crimes, missing children, other compelling state purposes — for example in a border context to ensure people of concern can be identified at the border while not impeding the flow of travelers,” Therrien testified today. But, he added, “I’m not sure facial recognition should be used for common theft, for instance, given the risks of use of the technology for privacy and other democratic rights.” Therrien added that federal law or guidance is a matter of urgency. While he doesn’t believe there should be a complete ban on police use of the technology until a new law is passed, he would like to see the RCMP’s use of facial recognition limited in the meantime. In his opening statement to the privacy committee this morning Therrien said that if used responsibly, facial recognition technology can offer significant benefits to society. “However,” he added, “it can also be extremely intrusive, enable widespread surveillance, provide biased results and erode human rights, including the right to participate freely, without surveillance, in democratic life. “It is different from other technologies in that it relies on biometrics, permanent characteristics that, contrary to a password, cannot be changed. It greatly reduces personal autonomy, including the control individuals should have over their personal information. “Its use encompasses the public and the private sectors, sometimes for compelling purposes like the investigation of serious crimes or proving one’s identity, sometimes for convenience.” The post Canada should limit police use of facial recognition technology, say privacy commissioners first appeared on IT World Canada.
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