-
02/06/2020
A school district in New York has flipped the switch to activate a facial recognition system across hundreds of cameras in its school buildings, drawing sharp criticism from civil rights advocates and concerned parents and students. The move comes as school administrators...
-
02/03/2020
In December 2019, the non-partisan federal government National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) published a landmark study presenting further evidence that facial recognition algorithms, across the board, are not ready for prime-time. The researchers found that face recognition algorithms perform more...
-
01/10/2020
Yesterday the First Circuit became the first federal court of appeals to hear oral argument on the constitutionality of the warrantless placement of a secret video camera on top of a utility pole after the ACLU’s 2018 victory in the Supreme Court...
-
12/19/2019
Face surveillance is dangerous when it works, and when it doesn’t. A new report from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), a non-partisan federal government research agency based at the US Department of Commerce, adds further data to a growing...
-
10/11/2019
Last night Somerville became the third city in Massachusetts to enact a law requiring city council oversight and control of all municipal government surveillance, following Cambridge and Lawrence. The ordinance was approved at the City Council by unanimous vote. City Councilor Ben...
-
09/10/2019
Documents obtained by the ACLU of Massachusetts, published today for the first time, show that surveillance oversight ordinances are effective means of stopping secret agreements between companies like Amazon’s Ring and local police. For years, the ACLU and other digital rights advocates...
-
07/29/2019
A new study has found major flaws in a live facial recognition trial by police in the United Kingdom. Researchers said the trials violated human rights, muddled public consent, and were inaccurate in 81 percent of cases. The Met police began with...
-
07/26/2019
On Tuesday, July 30 Cambridge Mayor Marc McGovern and Councilors Craig Kelley and Sumbul Siddiqui will introduce a measure to ban municipal government use of face surveillance technology. If the measure passes, Cambridge would become the second city in Massachusetts, after Somerville,...
-
06/24/2019
Since 2006, the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles has used face surveillance technology to try to weed out fraudulent license applicants. From almost day one, the RMV has allowed law enforcement agencies across Massachusetts and the United States to use its drivers...
-
05/17/2019
In two reports published this week, Georgetown University Law School’s Center on Privacy and Technology joins the ACLU of Massachusetts in calling for a moratorium on the government’s use of face surveillance technology, citing alarming new findings about law enforcement’s use of...
Page 2 of 182«12345...102030...»Last