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Police using passport images for facial recognition would be a ‘setback’ for trust in AI

2023-10-09 04:39:53
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Providing police with access to the passport image database for crime-fighting facial recognition could be a ‘setback’ for public trust in AI, experts have warned. The idea of opening up the 45 million plus images to police facial recognition technology has been put forward by policing minister Chris Philip, who says it would help tackle shoplifting.

The Home Office says it is working to provide police with all the tools and technology required to catch criminals (Photo: Trismegist san/Shutterstock)
The Home Office says it is working to provide police with all the tools and technology required to catch criminals. (Photo by Trismegist san/Shutterstock)

Speaking during a Policy Exchange debate held as part of the Conservative Party conference in Manchester this week, Philp described the algorithms used by the police for comparing CCTV and crime scene images with custody images as “extremely sophisticated”. He added that they even produce accurate results when the original images are fuzzy or blurred. 

The crime, policing and fire minister went on to tell the audience at the debate on ways to tackle shoplifting that the passport image database was fully searchable, if not directly linked to police systems. He wants to ensure that police always gather CCTV footage from a crime scene and “always run it through the facial recognition database” as part of a wider “zero tolerance approach” to shoplifting in the future.

During the conference, he also declared: “I’m going to be asking police forces to search all of those databases – the police national database, which has custody images, but also other databases like the passport database.”

The draft EU AI Act bans police use of facial recognition technology in public places. It is considered high risk due to the chance of false positives and bias. Police services in Europe will also not be able to scrape facial images from the internet, CCTV footage or other database to create a facial recognition database. 

UK regulation on the subject is less clear, spread across different pieces of legislation. This has not been aided by the closure of the biometrics and surveillance camera commissioner’s office. Data watchdog the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) told Tech Monitor it is in discussion with the government over the proposals.

A Home Office spokesperson said it was committed to providing police with the tools and technology required to solve and prevent crimes, as well as bring offenders to justice. “Technology such as facial recognition can help the police quickly and accurately identify those wanted for serious crimes, as well as missing or vulnerable people,” the spokesperson said. “It also frees up police time and resources, meaning more officers can be out on the beat, engaging with communities and carrying out complex investigations.”

While the Home Office spokesperson didn’t confirm or deny that police could be given access to the passport database, they did say: “We are working with policing to enable seamless searching of relevant images where it is necessary and proportionate for them to do so to investigate crime and protect the public.”

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The move could result in bias and loss of trust in AI

A report published earlier this year by the Ada Lovelace Institute on the legal governance of biometric technologies found that the current legal framework is not fit for purpose. This was due to a fragmented patchwork of laws. Michael Birtwistle, associate director of law and policy at the institute, said: “We are concerned by reports that the government intends to repurpose the UK passport images database for police use. The accuracy and scientific basis of facial recognition technologies is highly contested, and their legality is uncertain.”

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Multiple groups, including a parliamentary select committee, the former biometrics commissioner Fraser Sampson and other experts, have expressed a need for a proper governance mechanism to be established before facial recognition technology is used. 

Privacy campaigners are opposed to police using facial recognition software because there are risks of misidentification and racial bias. The Met Police, which has been trialling the technology, said previously that during a review of its usage, it found “no statistically significant bias about race and gender,” adding that the chance of a false match was one in 6,000 people who pass the camera. 

Birtwistle says expanding the deployment of facial recognition to a database with 45 million images of members of the British public without their consent and such a framework would “risk creating an unprecedented public backlash, setting back trust in public sector use of data and AI.” He said there is some precedent for the potential backlash in the response to previous proposals to repurpose GP surgery records or other personal information.

“We urge the government to reconsider these proposals and look again at how the Data Protection and Digital Information Bill could be used to deliver the biometrics governance regime the UK so urgently needs,” he added.

Sampson agrees, telling the BBC that the state has a large collection of high-quality photographs of most of the population, including driving licences and passports but they were given for a specific purpose. “If the state routinely runs every photograph against every picture of every suspected incident of crime simply because it can, there is a significant risk of disproportionality and damaging public trust,” he said.

Read more: UK police facial recognition technology usage could be expanded

Topics in this article : AI

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参考译文
警方使用护照图像进行人脸识别将对人工智能的信任造成“打击”
专家警告称,为警方提供访问护照图像数据库用于反罪犯罪人脸识别可能对公众对AI的信任构成“挫折”。警方部长克里斯·菲利普提出,将4500万张以上的图像向警方人脸识别技术开放,以帮助打击盗窃行为。内政部表示,其正在努力为警方提供所有必要的工具和技术,以抓捕罪犯。(照片由Trismegist san/Shutterstock提供)在本周曼彻斯特保守党大会期间举行的政策交换辩论上,菲利普将警方用于将闭路电视和犯罪现场图像与拘留图像进行比对的算法描述为“极其复杂”。他补充说,即使原始图像模糊或失焦,它们也能产生准确的结果。犯罪、警务和消防部长在讨论如何打击盗窃的辩论中告诉观众,护照图像数据库是完全可搜索的,尽管并未直接连接到警方系统。他表示,要确保警方在犯罪现场始终收集闭路电视录像,并将其“始终通过人脸识别数据库进行比对”,作为未来对盗窃采取广泛“零容忍”措施的一部分。在大会上,他补充说:“我将要求警方搜索所有这些数据库——警察国家数据库,它包含拘留图像,还包括其他数据库,例如护照数据库。” 拟议的欧盟AI法案禁止警方在公共场所使用人脸识别技术。由于存在误报和偏见的风险,这被认为具有高风险。欧洲的警察部门也将不能从互联网、闭路电视录像或其他数据库中抓取面部图像,以创建人脸识别数据库。英国在该领域的监管尚不明确,散落在不同的法律法规中。这一问题因生物识别和监控摄像头专员办公室的关闭而更加复杂。数据监管机构信息专员办公室(ICO)告诉Tech Monitor,其正在就这些提议与政府进行讨论。内政部发言人表示,政府致力于为警方提供解决和预防犯罪、以及将犯罪分子绳之以法所需的工具和技术。“人脸识别等技术可以帮助警方快速准确地识别那些被通缉的严重犯罪人员,以及失踪或弱势人群,”发言人表示。“它还节省了警方的时间和资源,意味着更多的警察能够在街头执勤,与社区互动并进行复杂调查。” 虽然内政部发言人并未证实或否认警方是否可以访问护照数据库,但表示:“我们正与警方合作,使他们能在有必要和适当的情况下无缝搜索相关图像,以调查犯罪和保护公众。” 我们的合作伙伴内容如何通过现代ERP系统加速Midsona的效率并降低成本:混合云如何优化您的业务:自动化如何正在改变财务部门:这一举措可能导致偏见和公众对AI信任的丧失。爱达·洛芙莱斯研究所今年早些时候发表的一份关于生物识别技术法律治理的报告发现,目前的法律框架并不适合目的。这是由于法律的碎片化。研究所法律与政策副主任迈克尔·伯特威斯特表示:“我们担心有报道显示,政府计划将英国护照图像数据库重新用于警方用途。人脸识别技术的准确性和科学基础备受争议,它们的合法性也存在不确定性。” 点击查看所有通讯稿:注册我们的通讯稿:数据、见解和分析即时送达您:由Tech Monitor团队:点击此处注册 一些团体,包括议会特别委员会、前生物识别专员弗雷泽·桑普森和其他专家,都表达了在使用人脸识别技术之前,需要建立一个适当的治理机制的必要性。隐私活动人士反对警方使用人脸识别软件,因为存在误识别和种族偏见的风险。此前,已在试用人脸识别技术的伦敦警察厅表示,在对其使用情况的审查中发现“关于种族和性别的偏差在统计上并不显著”,并补充说,误识的可能性是6000人中有一人。伯特威斯特表示,在没有公众同意的情况下,将人脸识别技术部署到拥有4500万英国公众图像的数据库,将“引发前所未有的公众抗议,损害公众对公共部门使用数据和AI的信任。” 他表示,此前关于将全科诊所记录或其他个人信息重新用途的提议所引发的公众反应,也存在类似的先例。“我们敦促政府重新考虑这些提议,并再次审视《数据保护和数字信息法案》如何被用来实现英国迫切需要的生物识别治理制度,”他补充道。桑普森也表示赞同,他告诉BBC,国家拥有大量高质量的人口图像,包括驾照和护照,但这些图像的提供是出于特定目的。“如果国家出于技术可行性,就常规地将每张照片与每个疑似犯罪事件的照片进行比对,将存在显著的不正当性风险,并损害公众信任,”他说。更多信息:英国警方或将扩大人脸识别技术的使用 本文主题:人工智能
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