Police in Edmonton are now testing AI-powered body cameras that scan faces in real time against a 7,000-person “high-risk” watch list.

Axon once said facial recognition on body cams posed serious ethical risks.

https://apnews.com/article/ai-facial-recognition-axon-edmonton-21f319ce806a0023f855eb69d928d31e

#facialrecognition #policesurveillance
1/2

AI-equipped police body cameras in Canada's Edmonton spark ethical concerns

Police in Edmonton, Canada, have started a pilot project using AI-equipped body cameras to detect faces on a "high risk" watch list. The move by Axon Enterprise, Inc. has raised ethical concerns, especially since the company previously paused facial recognition due to privacy issues. The pilot aims to enhance officer and public safety by identifying individuals flagged for a history of serious offenses. However, critics worry about societal risks and the lack of public debate. Axon CEO Rick Smith describes the project as "early-stage field research" to gather insights. The pilot will run through December, with results analyzed later at the station.

AP News

Now it's running a live pilot with little public debate, even as experts warn the tech remains biased, inaccurate. Officers won’t even know when the system flags someone; matches will be reviewed later.

Privacy regulators were notified the same day the program launched.
2/2

@oaklandprivacy So this won’t provide any actual benefit to police, OR the public.

“Hey, last Tuesday you walked by that drug dealer we’ve been chasing for 6 months.”

It endangers the cop AND the public by letting high-profile criminals keep walking the streets.