Some information about the FBI’s use of such technology is already publicly known, as The Washington Post reported Thursday:

Crockford, in the blog post, also detailed some of the FBI’s recent uses of the technology—and why it’s concerning.

“Since at least 2010, the FBI has monitored civil society groups, including racial justice movements, Occupy Wall Street, environmentalists, Palestinian solidarity activists, Abolish ICE protesters, and Cuba and Iran normalization proponents,” Crockford noted. “In recent years, the FBI has wasted considerable resources to spy on Black activists, who the agency labeled ‘Black Identity Extremists’ to justify even more surveillance of the Black Lives Matter movement and other fights for racial justice. The agency has also investigated climate justice activists including 350.org and the Standing Rock water protectors under the banner of protecting national security.”

Click Here: West Coast Eagles Guernsey

“Because of the FBI’s secrecy, little is known about how the agency is supercharging its surveillance activities with face recognition technology,” Crockford continued. “This lack of transparency would be frightening enough if the technology worked. But it doesn’t: Numerous studies have shown face surveillance technology is prone to significant racial and gender bias.”

Crockford concluded that “of course, even in the highly unlikely event that face recognition technology were to become 100 percent accurate, the technology’s threat to our privacy rights and civil liberties remains extraordinary.”

Given that threat and the absence of federal rules on use of the technology by governments or private entities, muncipalties and states are pursuing local restrictions and bans with the help of privacy advocacy groups including the ACLU.