IBM quits facial recognition, joins call for police reforms
IBM quits facial recognition, joins call for
police reforms
By MATT O'BRIEN58 minutes ago
IBM says it is getting out of the facial
recognition business over concern about how it can be used for mass
surveillance and racial profiling.
A letter to U.S. lawmakers Monday from new IBM
CEO Arvind Krishna said the tech giant “has sunset its general purpose facial
recognition and analysis software products.”
Krishna was addressing Democrats who have been
working on police
reform legislation in Congress in response to the death of George Floyd and others in law
enforcement interactions that have sparked a worldwide reckoning over racial
injustice. The sweeping reform package could include restrictions on police use
of facial recognition.
IBM had previously tested its facial
recognition software with the New York Police Department but it’s not clear if
it has existing contracts with other governments.
Police use of facial recognition has come under
heightened scrutiny after researchers found racial and gender disparities in
systems built by companies including IBM, Microsoft and Amazon. That led IBM
and Microsoft to improve their accuracy but Krishna said now is the time to
debate whether facial recognition technology should be used at all by domestic
law enforcement agencies.
Krishna’s letter called for police reforms and
said “IBM firmly opposes and will not condone uses of any technology, including
facial recognition technology offered by other vendors, for mass surveillance,
racial profiling” and human rights violations.
It comes as civil liberties advocates have
raised broader concerns in recent weeks about the use of surveillance
technology to monitor protesters or enforce rules set to curb the coronavirus
pandemic.
Even before the protests, U.S. senators this
year had been scrutinizing New York facial recognition
startup Clearview AI over privacy concerns following investigative
reports about its practice of harvesting billions of photos from social media
and other internet services to identify people.
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