Facial recognition technology used at airports had 85% match rate during tests
Facial recognition technology used at airports had 85%
match rate during tests
By Hugo Martin SEP 28, 2018 | 1:15 PM
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency is expected
to complete a 30-day test next month of the use of facial recognition
technology to screen international travelers at Los Angeles International
Airport.
But an audit by the Department of Homeland Security’s
Office of Inspector General found that pilot programs to test the technology at
nine airports last year had a combined match rate of only 85% — below the
agency’s goal of a 97% to 100% match rate.
The Department of Homeland Security hopes to use facial
recognition to better track and record the approximately 1 million foreign
travelers who each year enter and exit the country, with about 300,000
traveling by air.
During the pilot programs at airports in Boston, Houston,
New York and Atlanta, travelers were photographed as they prepared to board
planes. The cameras used facial recognition technology to match up the faces of
departing travelers with data collected by the federal government on each foreign
national who enters the country.
When photos were taken of travelers whose images were
already in the government system, the system matched the images 98% of the
time, according to the audit. But airport screeners couldn’t always take photos
of the passengers because of “poor network availability, a lack of dedicated
staff and compressed boarding times due to flight delays,” according to the
audit. As a result the overall “biometric confirmation” rate was 85%, the audit
said.
The audit also blamed poor quality of digital images for
difficulty matching travelers under the age of 29 and over the age of 70. In
addition, the system had more difficulty matching certain nationalities —
specifically U.S. citizens, Mexicans and Canadians — because the government’s
“digital gallery” had fewer photos of those nationalities than of other foreign
travelers, the audit said.
Congress has set aside up to $1 billion from fees charged
to foreign visitors to fund the creation of a biometric screening system. The
audit said the Department of Homeland Security and the Customs and Border
Protection agency both concur with the recommendations of the Office of
Inspector General.
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