The Great American Dragnet: Over 200 Million People Are in the Facial Recognition Database

from BlacklistedNews.com: You are probably participating in the facial recognition database
whether you want to or not. Most likely, your visage is there to be
easily identified, without your consent, even if you’ve never committed a
crime.



Using the vague criteria of “law enforcement purposes”, the United
States has more than 200 million Americans filed away in various facial
recognition databases.
 If you have a driver’s license or any other
government photo ID, your face is probably one of them.

The Washington Post reports:

Law enforcement use of such facial searches is blurring the
traditional boundaries between criminal and non-criminal databases,
putting images of people never arrested in what amount to perpetual
digital lineups.
The most advanced systems allow police to run searches
from laptop computers in their patrol cars and offer access to the FBI
and other federal authorities.

Such open access has caused a backlash in some of the few states
where there has been a public debate. As the databases grow larger and
increasingly connected across jurisdictional boundaries, critics warn
that authorities are developing what amounts to a national identification system
— based on the distinct geography of each human
face.

There is no way to “opt out” of this for privacy reasons if you
intend to be a licensed driver in the United States. Have you noticed
that now when you go to have a driver’s license picture, you aren’t
allowed to smile?  That’s because it can throw off the ability of
scanners to “recognize” you, because it changes the shape of your eyes
and can also obscure your eye color.  For the same reason, you aren’t
allowed to wear glasses, long bangs, or head coverings.  Your face is
being catalogued for future identification purposes.

Related:
Boston police: Facial recognition software didn’t help
Video: The Last Word on CCTV 

Only 13 states have not gone into full-out Big Brother mode with
facial recognition…yet.  At this time, the states without the technology
are Alaska, California, Wyoming, Arizona, Mississippi, Louisiana,
Missouri, Michigan, Ohio, Virginia, Maryland,  Maine, and New Hampshire.
 However, even though they don’t have the technology to readily
identify residents, they still have millions of photos in their
databases.


What’s more, it isn’t only our driver’s licenses that we have to
worry about.  Another, even larger, database exists. The US State
Department has a database with 230 million searchable images.
Anyone
with a passport or an immigration visa may find themselves an unwilling
participant in this database.   Here’s the breakdown of who has a photo
database:



  • The State Department has about 15 million photos of passport or visa holders
  • The FBI has about15 million photos of people who have been arrested or convicted of crimes
  • The Department of Defense has about 6 million photos, mainly of Iraqis and Afghans
  • Various police agencies and states have at least 210 million driver’s license photos


This invasion of privacy is just another facet of the surveillance
state, and should be no surprise considering the information Edward Snowden just shared about the over-reaching tentacles of the NSA into
all of our communications. We are filing our identities with the
government and they can identify us at will, without any requirement for
probable cause.


The authorities that use this technology claim that the purpose of it
is to make us safer, by helping to prevent identity fraud and to
identify criminals.  However, what freedom are we giving up for this
“safety” cloaked in benevolence? We are giving up the freedom of having
the most elemental form of privacy – that of being able to go about our
daily business without being watched and identified.
 And once you’re
identified, this connects to all sorts of other personal information
that has been compiled: your address, your driving and criminal records,
and potentially, whatever else that has been neatly filed away at your
friendly neighborhood fusion center.


Think about it:  You’re walking the dog and you fail to scoop the
poop – if there’s a surveillance camera in the area, it would be a
simple matter, given the technology, for you to be identified. If you
are attending a protest that might be considered “anti-government”,
don’t expect to be anonymous. 

A photo of the crowd could easily result
in the identification of most of the participants.  Are you purchasing
ammo, preparedness items, or books about a controversial topic?  Paying
cash won’t buy you much in the way of privacy – your purchase will most
likely be captured on the CCTV camera at the checkout stand, making you
easily identifiable to anyone who might wish to track these kinds of
 things.  What if a person with access to this technology uses it for
personal, less than ethical reasons, like stalking an attractive women
he saw on the street?  The potential for abuse is mind-boggling.



If you can’t leave your house without being identified, do you have
any real freedom left, or are you just a resident in a very large cage?

 

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