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Interpol Wants Facial Recognition Database to Catch Suspects
Interpol is planning to expand its role into the mass screening of passengers moving around the world by creating a face recognition database to catch wanted suspects.
Interpol is planning to expand its role into the mass screening of passengers moving around the world by creating a face recognition database to catch wanted suspects.(www.autoexpress.co.uk) Every
year more than 800 million international travellers fail to undergo
"the most basic scrutiny" to check whether their identity documents
have been stolen, the global policing cooperation body has warned.
Senior figures want a system that lets immigration officials capture digital images of passengers and immediately cross-check them against a database of pictures of terror suspects, international criminals and fugitives.
The UK's first automated face recognition gates - matching passengers to their digital image in the latest generation of passports - began operating at Manchester airport in August.
Mark Branchflower, head of Interpol's fingerprint unit, will this week unveil proposals in London for the creation of biometric identification systems that could be linked to such immigration checks.
The civil liberties group No2ID, which campaigns against identity cards, expressed alarm at the plans.
"This is a move away from seeking specific persons to GCHQ-style bulk interception of information," warned spokesman Michael Parker.
"There's already a fair amount of information collected in terms of passenger records. This is the next step. Law enforcement agencies want the most efficient systems but there has to be a balance between security and privacy." The growth of international criminal gangs and the spread of terrorist threats has increased demand for Interpol's services.
Last year it carried out 10,000 fingerprint searches; this year the figure will reach 20,000.
An automated fingerprint identification system with far greater capacity, known as Metamorpho, will be installed next year. Earlier this month Interpol launched its "global security initiative" aimed at raising $1bn (£577m) to strengthen its law enforcement programmes. It claims to hold the "names and identifiers" of 9,000 terrorist suspects.
Branchflower will speak at the opening of the Biometrics 2008 conference in Westminster about the possibility of extending its biometric database.
Before the conference he said that Interpol wanted to create a face recognition database, to match its fingerprint and DNA records, that could be searched and matched automatically.
"Facial recognition is a step we could go to quite quickly," said Branchflower, "and it's increasingly of use to [all] countries. There's so much data we have but they are in records we can't search."
If Interpol had been operating a face recognition database linked to national border controls last autumn, he said, it might have picked up a Canadian teacher wanted for child abuse as he entered Thailand. The paedophile was the subject of a high-profile manhunt.
"We could have picked him up the moment he entered Bangkok rather than having to wait another two weeks," said Branchflower."We need to get our data to the border entry points. There will be such a large role in the future for fingerprints and facial recognition."
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3 Comments so far
Show AllWatch "The Enemy Within" on PBS -- you may not want what you think you want.
The slow, steady march towards high-tech police state surveillance is as real a threat as any we now face. The mere advance of technology itself, benign or otherwise, dictates almost automatically that our crime enforcement bodies are headed in this direction. To wake up one day in the not-too-distant future and find ourselves in a world like that of Orwell's 1984 is a grave possibility, made all the more terrifying by the realisation that the only thing necessary for such a state to become reality is the public's silence.
As regular citizens we should be outraged at the erosion of our liberties and the powers and toys being handed to police and government agencies. Yet what, I think, keeps people quiet and co-operative with these measures is the self-assurance that the police 'aren't bad guys'. Sure, there is potential for abuse - but at the end of the day, those people are there to protect us. If you haven't done anything wrong, you have nothing to fear. Right?
I don't necessarily deny that in the present day this argument is a reasonable one. But how much do you really trust your government? If we look at the political trends, and the slow lurch towards the police states so many foretold during the 20th century, we should begin to make out the writing on the wall. Good men with large powers don't stay in authority forever, and even if they are not abused in our time, we have increasingly scarce safeguards against such abuse in the future (incidentally, I am not trying to imply that the current world governments pushing for these surveillance measures are, in any sense, good).
Facial recognition technology is really just the icing on the cake. There are a whole host of government spying projects in the works, and I do not like the thought of where this will end.
Whether liberty is taken all in one go, or piece by piece, the end result is the same.
Naomi Kline wrote an article about one city in China where their testing all this stuff out on the public. I think it was called "China's All Seeing Eye".. posted here on Commondreams.
This is some serious big brother stuff- we will have no privacy what-so-ever when this takes root. As long as you're not a criminal you have nothing to worry about- so they say. Well how about when the day comes that it's time to overthrow a tyrrany, as elaborated in the Constitution? Then what will you do?