Let's say it together: Facial-recognition technology is a dangerous, biased mess.
We are reminded of this obvious fact again with the news Friday that an innocent man, despite not looking like the perpetrator at all, was arrested last year after being falsely identified by faulty facial-recognition tech.
This is the second known case of facial recognition software directly leading to the arrest of an innocent man. It's something privacy advocates fear will be a growing trend unless drastic action is taken to stop this technology in its tracks.
Michael Oliver, then 25, was charged with a felony for supposedly grabbing a phone from a car passenger and throwing it, reports the Detroit Free Press. Except, of course, it wasn't Oliver. With facial-recognition technology's demonstrated bias when it comes to identifying the faces of Black people (and BIPOC in general, and women, and old people, and young people...) it should come as no surprise that both Oliver and the actual phone-grabber are both Black.
The similarities stopped there, however. As the Detroit Free Presspoints out, Oliver's arms are covered in very visible tattoos. In the video, the man who grabbed the phone is obviously tattoo-less. Still, Detroit Police arrested him anyway.
Dan Korobkin, legal director of the ACLU of Michigan, released a statement condemning both the arrest and Detroit police's use of facial-recognition technology.
"Lawmakers must take urgent action to stop law enforcement use of this technology until it can be determined what policy, if any, can effectively prevent this technology's harms," the statement, emailed to Mashable, reads. "At the same time, police and prosecutors nationwide should review all cases involving the use of this technology and should notify all individuals charged as a result of it. This technology is dangerous when wrong and dangerous when right."
Oliver's case, while upsetting enough on its own, isn't even unique — a fact that makes it all the more terrifying. Late last month we learned that Detroit police arrested a (yes) Black man by the name of Robert Julian-Borchak Williams after facial-recognition software sloppily matched his driver's license photo to blurry surveillance video.
"I guess the computer got it wrong," a cop reportedly told Williams after he had already spent 30 hours in jail.
Detroit authorities, for their part, insist that this was a one-time — er, two-time — mistake, and that it could never happen again.
SEE ALSO: Congressman calls out Amazon's 'performative' facial-recognition moratorium
“As a result of these two cases, we have a more stringent protocol in facial recognition cases," Wayne County (the county in which Detroit falls) prosecutor Kym Worthy told the Detroit Free Press. "The cases will be reviewed during the warrant charging phase, prior to the preliminary examination, and again when the case is bound over to the Circuit Court in any case where facial recognition has been used as an investigative tool."
There, don't you feel better? The next time a person is arrested for a crime they didn't commit based on some garbage facial-recognition algorithm riddled with errors, authorities will at least have gone through a more stringent protocolfirst.
文章
299
浏览
19
获赞
7
Dr. Dre, a big USC donor, says his daughter got into USC 'on her own'
Dr. Dre wrote that his daughter Truly was accepted to the University of Southern California "all onMeet the influencers who are fighting the spread of online conspiracy theories
Abbie Richards didn't set out to become an influencer. She "fell into it" after she posted a chart oHow to get free books on your Kindle
An Amazon Kindle is a lot like a laptop, or a cell phone, or a house: Once you buy one, you have toDyson's newest vacuum, the V15, comes with a laser beam
If Yoda wielded a vacuum cleaner instead of a lightsaber, it would be this one.Launching Wednesday,Uber Boat takes over London commuter ferry for water rides
UPDATE: Aug. 3, 2020, 10:03 a.m. BST Uber Boat has launched in London, setting sail on the River ThaLaura Loomer says Clubhouse booted her 5 hours after she joined
Laura Loomer, the far right internet personality-turned-failed Congressional candidate, has been banWhy COVID vaccines give way better protection than a COVID infection
COVID vaccines give us much better protection than a COVID infection, say infectious disease expertsBored Ape Yacht Club hacked again, loses $360,000 in NFTs
The Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFT was hacked Saturday, losing upwards of 200 ETH (about $360,000)Encrypted Signal app downloads skyrocket amidst nationwide protests
When the police state comes knocking, a little bit of privacy goes a long way. As peaceful protesterStreamed concerts and XR tech in live music are here to stay
After DJ Steve Aoki gave the polo shirt-clad president of Qualcomm a tour of his phantasmagorical LaTelegram is blocked in Brazil because it didn't check its emails
UPDATE: Mar. 21, 2022, 12:09 p.m. Brazil has now lifted Telegram's ban, two days after it was officThe Citizen app is testing a service that lets people order private security on demand, leaks show
Imagine Uber but for ordering a private security force directly to your location.According to leakedEncrypted Signal app downloads skyrocket amidst nationwide protests
When the police state comes knocking, a little bit of privacy goes a long way. As peaceful protesterAmazon gives workers new wellness program, but not extra time
Amazon wants warehouse workers to take action to improve their health — but they won’t gBritish woman tries ranch dressing for the first time and tastes enlightenment
A British woman's first time trying ranch dressing is going viral. Dawn Farmer, who describes hersel