In the United States, the war continues with facial recognition technology: now it is banned in Minneapolis

The City Council of Minneapolis, the largest city in the state of Minnesota in the United States, decided without objection to ban the use of facial recognition technology in the city. At the moment, a ban on facial recognition is in effect in more than ten cities in the United States, including Boston, San Francisco, Oakland, Portland, Minneapolis and others.

City Councilor Steve Fletcher said citizens are deeply concerned about technology that violates their privacy without consent. It is about capturing individuals without consent and performing extensive automated monitoring. Therefore, they decided to standardize these technologies.

In the United States, the war continues with facial recognition technology: now it is banned in Minneapolis

We have heard serious concerns from the community about technology invading privacy without people’s consent, and we need to regulate this. The ordinance prohibits the use of technology by city departments, with a few minor exceptions that cannot harm residents.

Steve Fletcher

The new law prohibits the city police or municipal agencies from using facial recognition technology, including buying appropriate technology or using data obtained with this technology.

Facial recognition technology works really well if you are like me – a middle-aged white male – but for everyone else it can malfunction that is not acceptable anywhere else. We cannot expose people in our city, especially women of color, to such a high level of risk.

Steve Fletcher

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