The Malta Independent 25 April 2024, Thursday
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Standing up to the surveillance state

Carmel Cacopardo Sunday, 11 November 2018, 10:18 Last update: about 6 years ago

Safe City Malta, part of the government's public-private partnership arm Projects Malta, is planning to deploy high-definition CCTV cameras with facial recognition software. It is claimed that these cameras can identify those involved in criminal activity. The subject was referred to in the budget speech in which it was announced that, after adequate public consultation, such technology will be introduced in a number of areas. We were informed that Paceville and Marsa are the prime candidates for this technology.

So far, no consultation has taken place, but a Memorandum of Understanding has apparently already been signed with the Chinese global communication technology giant Huawei, and implementation could begin in the coming months. So, any the consultation, if carried out, will serve no purpose because the decisions have already been made.

Earlier this year, Huawei entered into an agreement with the Public Security Bureau in Xinjiang, China's largest province. The Chinese authorities have spent heavily on making Xinjiang a testing ground for the use of facial recognition, digital monitoring and artificial intelligence in policing.

Huawei will provide the region's police with technical support, help build up human technical expertise and 'meet the digitisation requirements of the public security industry'. A local government website paraphrased Fan Lixin, Xinjiang Public Security Bureau's deputy director, as saying that such co-operation would guarantee 'Xinjiang's social stability and long-term security'.

The above quote is in contrast to the contents of Huawei's Annual Report for 2017, which drives home the message that Huawei cares a great deal about privacy. We are told that, in 2017, "Huawei continued to strengthen compliance in multiple business domains, including trade, cyber security and data and privacy protection." We are furthermore informed of the "Huawei's cyber security concepts - building security through innovation, enhancing security through collaboration and jointly building trust in a digital world."

The contrast is probably the result of the messages being directed towards different audiences!

Closer to home, police in the United Kingdom have been experimenting with facial recognition technology for some time. Big Brother Watch, a UK-based civil liberties group, reports that the systems in use are, on average, incorrect nine times out of ten. A 56-page report published in May, entitled Face Off: the lawless growth of facial recognition in UK policing concluded that "a staggering 95 per cent of matches wrongly identified innocent people". To add insult to injury, innocent people's biometric photographs were taken and stored without their knowledge in blatant disregard of basic data protection norms.

The use of facial recognition technology as a law and order tool has been welcomed by the police, as it can theoretically enhance their capabilities in the fight against crime. The proposal, however, is a nightmare for the rest of us because if it is not used within the parameters of data protection legislation, facial recognition technology will be an unacceptable invasion of the basic norms of privacy to which each one of us is entitled.

Commissioner for Information and Data Protection Saviour Cachia, interviewed by the GWU's daily newspaper earlier this week emphasised that he expected a proper assessment to be carried out by the authorities prior to the use of facial recognition technology. Mr Cachia emphasised the fact that much more needs to be done before considering when and how facial recognition technology is used for security purposes. No one is aware whether or not the required assessment indicated by Mr Cachia has, in fact, been done or even if work on it has commenced.

This technology invades our privacy in an indiscriminate manner and our fundamental human rights are at risk of being breeched left, right and centre. Examining in detail the impact that this technology could have on criminal activity would help us determine whether it makes any sense to sacrifice our privacy (even minutely) in order for the surveillance state to take over and control segments of our life. If the UK experience is anything to go by, there is one logical conclusion: we should stand up to the surveillance state.

The Government should initiate a public consultation at the earliest opportunity and lay all its cards on the table for public scrutiny.


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