RCMP Broke Privacy Laws With Their Use of Facial Recognition Software
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Manage episode 295138216 series 2935919
On June 10, 2021, Canada’s Office of the Privacy Commissioner (OPC) announced that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) broke the law by using Clearview AI facial-recognition software. Meanwhile, earlier this year, Clearview AI was found to have violated Canada’s federal private sector privacy law by creating a databank of more than three billion images scraped from internet websites without the consent of Canadian users whose images were used. Clients of Clearview AI users, such as the RCMP, could then match photographs of people in question (say, suspects) against the photographs in the databank created by Clearview AI.
While the RCMP, who initially lied about using the program publicly and to the OPC, contends that they only used technology to rescue children, the Commissioner states that this point is null. The use of facial recognition technology by the RCMP to search through massive repositories of Canadians who are innocent of any suspicion of crime presents a serious violation of privacy. A government institution cannot collect personal information from a third-party agent if that third-party agent collected the information unlawfully.
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