Last Week, Microsoft President- Brad Smith, published a blog post, requesting governments to regulate the rapid evolution of Facial Recognition technology. Along with all the merits that this technology offers, Brad states that the tech has the potential to be abused. He urges that 2019 be the year that governments focus on regulating the tech, because “Unless we act, we risk waking up five years from now to find that facial recognition services have spread in ways that exacerbate societal issues. By that time, these challenges will be much more difficult to bottle back up.”
The post highlights how Microsoft and tech companies will need to start creating safeguards to address facial recognition technology and its potential chances of abuse. Along with the support of governments and the tech sector, Microsoft believes that facial recognition technology can create positive societal benefits.
Considering that major tech giants like Amazon and Google have been facing backlash on providing their facial recognition technology to the Government, citizens need assurance that this technology will only have positive societal impacts.
Smith lists 3 important problems in this area that need to be addressed with government assistance:
Microsoft claims that they and other tech companies have been actively working to identify and reduce these errors while improving the accuracy and quality of facial recognition tools and services. Laws are needed in this area as “market forces will work well only if potential customers are well-informed and able to test facial recognition technology for accuracy and risks of unfair bias, including biases that arise in the context of specific applications and environments.”
They suggest that:
Microsoft believes people deserve to know when this technology is being used, so they can ask questions and exercise some choice in the matter if they wish. This transparency is important for building public knowledge and confidence in this technology. For implementing the same, they suggest:
Regarding issue 3, Microsoft elaborates how facial recognition technology could put fundamental freedoms at risk. Governments can use this technology with surveillance cameras and massive computing power and storage in the cloud, to enable continuous surveillance of specific individuals. It could follow anyone anywhere at any time or even all the time.
To prevent an encroachment on democratic freedoms, legislation should:
Microsoft, itself, has brought four lawsuits against the U.S. government since 2013 to protect people’s privacy rights.
Here are some comments from hacker news that caught our attention:
Smith mentions that Microsoft intends to let six principles to guide the company's use of facial recognition going forward. They are: fairness, transparency, accountability, nondiscrimination, notice and consent, and lawful surveillance. He further adds that Microsoft will formalize these principles through further documents, with an eye toward implementing them before the end of March 2019.
Head over to Smith’s full blog post to see his arguments and reasoning over Facial Recognition technology.
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