Privacy Advocates Quit Facial Recognition Panel to Protest Tech Lobby Chokehold

Nine privacy advocates on Monday resigned in protest from a year-long attempt to develop a code of conduct for the use of facial recognition technology, citing a failure to agree on “basic, specific” safeguards with industry lobbyists.

“At a base minimum, people should be able to walk down a public street without fear that companies they’ve never heard of are tracking their every movement—and identifying them by name—using facial recognition technology,” the privacy advocates wrote in a joint statement (pdf). “Unfortunately, we were unable to obtain agreement even with that basic, specific premise.”

The U.S. Commerce Department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) brought together a panel of security experts and lobbyists in February 2014 to develop a voluntary code of conduct “that specifies how the Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights applies to facial recognition technology in the commercial context.”

But over the course of 16 months, the nine privacy advocates—who include representatives from the ACLU, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Center for Democracy and Technology, and the Consumer Federation of America, among other groups—came to believe that the NTIA process was unlikely to “yield a set of privacy rules that offers adequate protections for the use of facial recognition technology.”

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