Privacy fears over FBI facial recognition database
Campaigners
have raised privacy concerns over a facial recognition database being
developed by the FBI that could contain 52m images by 2015.
The civil liberties group Electronic Frontier Foundation
(EFF) obtained information about the project through a freedom of
information request.
It said it was concerned that images of non-criminals would be stored alongside those of criminals.
The facial recognition database is part of the bureau's Next Generation Identification (NGI) programme
which is a large biometric database being developed to replace the
current Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System (IAFIS).
The programme, which is being rolled out over a number of
years, will offer "state of the art biometric identification services"
according to the bureau's website.
As well as facial recognition images the programme is being
developed to include the capture and storage of finger prints, iris
scans and palm prints.
'Increasing risks'
EFF said that the records it had seen showed the facial
recognition element of the NGI already contained 16m images by 2013 and
had the capability to contain as many as 52m by 2015.
In the current system, the fingerprints of criminals and
non-criminals are kept in separate databases. Non-criminals may have
their prints stored by the FBI if they have applied for a job that
requires fingerprints for a background check.
However, under the new system if a candidate is asked by an
employer to submit a photo along with their fingerprints this will now
be stored by the FBI, too. The difference is that all photos will be
stored on the same database regardless of whether someone has been
arrested for a crime.
"This means that even if you have never been arrested for a
crime, if your employer requires you to submit a photo as part of your
background check, your face image could be searched - and you could be
implicated as a criminal suspect, just by virtue of having that image in
the non-criminal file," said the EFF.
It says documents from the FBI show that 4.3m photos contained in the database by 2015 will be for non-criminal purposes.
The group also cites research that shows the risk of falsely identifying someone increases as the size of the dataset being examined increases.
"This means that many people will be presented as suspects for crimes they didn't commit."
At a US senate subcommittee meeting held in 2012 to discuss the
privacy implications of facial recognition technology, the official in
charge of the NGI programme at the time said the the FBI intended to
limit the system to criminal information.
It was also stressed that annual audits of local agencies'
systems will be carried out to "detect any type of misuse" and that the
FBI would back this up with their own audits.
The EFF points out that the Privacy Impact Assessment for the facial recognition element of NGI has not been updated since 2008.
"This is not how our system of justice was designed and
should not be a system that Americans tacitly consent to move towards,"
the EFF said.
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