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Live Facial Recognition: Home Office in Denial

7th April 2022
|In AI & Technology
|By Tim Clement-Jones

I recently asked a question about the new College of Policing guidance on Live Facial Recognition and received this answer from Baroness Williams the Home Office Minister.

So its carry on surveilling.

https://hansard.parliament.uk/Lords/2022-04-04/debates/787FBE4F-2CC8-405B-BBF8-3EBF336D2465/LiveFacialRecognitionPoliceGuidance#

Lord Clement-Jones
To ask Her Majesty’s Government what assessment they have made of the new College of Policing guidance on live facial recognition.
The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Williams of Trafford) (Con)
My Lords, facial recognition is an important public safety tool that helps the police to identify and eliminate suspects more quickly and accurately. The Government welcome the College of Policing’s national guidance, which responds to a recommendation in the Bridges v South Wales Police judgment.
Lord Clement-Jones
My Lords, despite committing to a lawful, ethical approach, the guidance gives carte blanche to the use of live and retrospective facial recognition, potentially allowing innocent victims and witnesses to be swept on to police watch-lists. This is without any legislation or parliamentary or other oversight, such as that recently recommended by the Justice and Home Affairs Committee, chaired by my noble friend Lady Hamwee. Are we not now sleep-walking into a surveillance society, and is it not now time for a moratorium on this technology, pending a review?
Baroness Williams of Trafford 
I disagree with everything that the noble Lord has said. I think every police force in the country uses retrospective facial recognition. Watch-lists are deleted upon use at a deployment, so there is no issue regarding ongoing data protection. Importantly, just as CCTV and retrospective recognition are still used to detect criminals, missing persons and vulnerable people, so is the application of LFR.
https://www.lordclementjones.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/House_of_Lords_04-04-22_15-08-40-1.mp4

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ABOUT LORD CLEMENT-JONES

MEMBER HOUSE OF LORDS

Tim Clement-Jones CBE, is former Chair of the House of Lords Artificial Intelligence Select Committee and Co-Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Artificial Intelligence. He is a Liberal Democrat Peer and their spokesman for Digital in the House of Lords. Tim is a champion of the creative industries and has a broad range of other interests including China and the Middle East, online harms, cancer services and pharmacy. He is President of Ambitious Autism, the national autism education charity, and Chair of the Council of Queen Mary University London and Chair of the Board of Trust Assurance Group Limited the ombudsman and dispute resolution service for energy, telecoms and other services.

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