How Facial Recognition is Changing CBP Operations
How Facial Recognition is Changing CBP Operations
By Brandi VincentJULY 25, 2019 03:00
PM ET
The tech is freeing up Customs and Border
Protection employees—once they learned to trust it.
It’s been difficult for
Customs and Border Protection insiders to accept that facial recognition
technology is now better at identifying humans than their human eyes are, but
that’s also a primary reason why the agency is increasingly deploying it,
Director of Policy Michael Hardin said at an event in Washington
Wednesday.
“This was really hard for us to sort of admit
to ourselves,” Hardin said on a panel hosted by the Information Technology and
Innovation Foundation. “But the reality of that is there are some things that
machines are better at and there are some things people are better at. Right
now, it’s clear that machines are better at matching a photo to a person—and
that’s shown up in all of our research.”
Hardin explained that, like many things across
CBP and the Homeland Security Department, their use of biometrics and facial
recognition largely stems from the aftermath of 9/11. Once follow-up reports
revealed that many of the hijackers employed document forging methods to enter
and exit the United States using various identities, the technology was
introduced into the realm of immigration and border-crossing.
Today, Hardin said the agency’s main use for
facial recognition is to confirm that people are who they say they are as they
move in, out and around the nation.
“It’s a huge advantage for us now, not just
because the machine can perform better than the human in the actual matching,
but also because it frees up the person to do other law enforcement activities
in a small amount of time, which is really all they have,” he said.
Benji Hutchinson, vice president of federal
operations at the information technology company NEC Corporation, also
differentiated between how facial recognition has come to be used across law
enforcement versus how Hardin and others are implementing it across immigration
services. Hutchinson said it’s used in family reunification to identify matches
of children that have been kidnapped, it helps dispel people who are wrongfully
convicted and it supports officials in developing investigatory leads.
He also noted that Homeland Security and other
components have recently launched a great deal of research around how to use
the technology to review images of sexually exploited children on the dark web
to try to identify the victims and their assailants.
“That’s another area that’s very cutting-edge
and very new, but it’s a promising use case,” he said.
The experts also addressed the growing concerns lawmakers and advocates are
raising around bias and disparities in the systems across racial and gender
lines.
Hutchinson said he’s seen “dramatic increases
in the accuracy of the technology” over the last five years and noted that
tests from the National Institute Standards and Technology revealed error rates
as low as 1%. He said tests with high-performing algorithms and massive
datasets of more than 5 million faces have error rates that are even
lower.
“I like to remind people that NIST tested four
algorithms in the late ‘90s, and last year they did over 150—we are talking a
dramatic increase in competition,” he said. “We do understand that it’s never
100 percent and that’s why we spend millions of dollars a year to keep fixing
the algorithms and making them better.”
Hardin also noted that CBP funded research at
NIST to help them better understand bias and ensure their algorithms are
working effectively.
“We wrote NIST a big check,” he said.
The policy director added that although the
agency “does not collect data on race,” they’ve conducted some of their own
internal studies including evaluating flights that are boarded biometrically
instead of with boarding passes and flights that go to other sides of the
world, in an effort to assess differentiation in the technology’s
performance.
“We haven’t found anything consistent in any particular
direction yet, but that doesn’t mean that we don’t take it seriously and we are
not looking at it really seriously,” Hardin said.
https://www.nextgov.com/emerging-tech/2019/07/how-facial-recognition-changing-cbp-operations/158704/
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