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Electronic Frontier Foundation Privacy

EFF and MuckRock Need Your Help Tracking Biometric Surveillance 19

v3rgEz writes: Police departments are increasingly tracking your face, your fingerprints, your tattoos — and even your DNA. The Electronic Frontier Foundation and MuckRock are working to uncover how local agencies are tracking you and bring some much-needed transparency to the murky world of biometric surveillance through a free public records audit: Just put in some basic information about an agency near you, and they'll publicly file a request to see what vendors your city is using, how they protect your privacy, and more.
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EFF and MuckRock Need Your Help Tracking Biometric Surveillance

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  • But everyone prefers to talk about politics in the above thread.

    So many cameras everywhere. Where do I begin? Hmm, guess I'll start with the house.

    • Damn! I swear this story was before the other one! And when I refreshed the page, they swapped places! whoa! Cool!

  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @12:08PM (#50249349)

    Fingerprints and other biometric data go always to the FBI's IAFIS [fbi.gov] and are kept for god only knows how long.

    What is included in IAFIS: Not only fingerprints, but corresponding criminal histories; mug shots; scars and tattoo photos; physical characteristics like height, weight, and hair and eye color; and aliases. The system also includes civil fingerprints, mostly of individuals who have served or are serving in the U.S. military or have been or are employed by the federal government. The fingerprints and criminal history information are submitted voluntarily by state, local, and federal law enforcement agencies.

    In the age of the Patriot act, it all goes into IAFIS. Oh and sign up for the TSA Pre-Check program [tsa.gov] and guess what, you're fingerprints go there too, for at least 75 years. Oh and recent supreme court rulings have allowed DNA evidence to be collected in connection with 'serious' crimes. [nytimes.com] The definition of serious is still nebulous but I know a guy who had to give a mouth swab for a public intoxication arrest.

    There's multiple reasons why I object to this kind of data being retained except for the purposes intended and it should have a lifespan suiting the needs, or it shouldn't be collected at all. Unfortunately for all of us in the US, everybody wants to collect data on us and our government is no different. If you're convicted of a felony, yes retain the data indefinitely but shit if you get a parking ticket or non-felony you shouldn't have this crap follow you around for the rest of your life.

    • Do you use that fingerprint thingy in your laptop/iPad/iPhone? All roads lead to Rome...

      • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @12:26PM (#50249481)

        last year a Virginia court ruled [wsj.com] that if you use biometric locks you can be compelled to unlock the device. So no I don't use them.

        • last year a Virginia court ruled that if you use biometric locks you can be compelled to unlock the device.

          To be compelled to assist your own prosecution... We still must drink our own hemlock when the state demands it.

        • Not true in Washington State. We have strong constitutional protections in our state constitution for privacy, and you need a specific and individual warrant for that.

          • Nothing the old rubber stamp can't fix, and it certainly does not address the problem I posted above. A damn warrant makes no difference to me. To force me to aid and abet my own prosecution in any fashion at all is just so patently absurd.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @01:38PM (#50250077)

      I wonder if any researchers have ever tried to turn the IAFIS fingerprint database on itself to see how many fingerprint "matches" they get on sets already in the database. I know a while back some researchers interested in the DNA side of things did something similar, taking several DNA profiles from the system and turning them around and throwing them back at the system to see if how many false positives they would get. Allowing for damaged evidence, lab mess ups and other possible sources of error they were getting several hits in a relatively small database, that is before the FBI shut them down, threatened them, and threatened anyone else against doing any such research. People seem to have an overly rosy view of how unique biometrics are, under perfect lab circumstances with limited sample sizes matches could very well have very high accuracy. In the real world with damaged evidence, poor lab procedures, forensic "scientists" less interested in science and more interested in getting the "bad guy", huge sample sizes and incorrectly collected specimens they are far less accurate.

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/crime/fbi-overstated-forensic-hair-matches-in-nearly-all-criminal-trials-for-decades/2015/04/18/39c8d8c6-e515-11e4-b510-962fcfabc310_story.html

  • Thank you EFF (Score:4, Interesting)

    by buck-yar ( 164658 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @12:12PM (#50249371)

    You guys do a lot of good work.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    how they protect your privacy

    Shouldn't that be, "how they don't protect your privacy"?

  • This headline reminds me of the "enter your credit card number here to see if it's been stolen" type of things. I realize that's not what's going on here, but that form asks for a lot, and while much of it is optional, I'm hesitant to touch it.

    Biometric markers are not security and should never be used as more than one component of a multifactor approach. Any system created to read and authenticate a biometric identifier can already be tricked by today's technology into accepting either a reproduction of th

  • That which was seen in a public place or seen from public space while occurring on private property or is a matter of public record may not actually have anything at all to do with privacy laws. A rental car company accidentally gave me my ex-wife's address a couple of years ago. I did not want or need her address. But being that it is part of the records of a private business I somehow find it hard to understand how privacy applies at all. I do understand that many people like being secretive but I'
  • A digital FOIA request can be very different at a city and state level. Some local officials might offer to do an exhaustive digital search and find nothing.
    The search term was not correct or the database was limited by design or the use of obscure line items, perfectly repeated spelling mistakes.
    A walk in request for a budget related 'look' or 'read' might show where new federal or state 'grants' went locally.
    A lot of private sector groups are now offering to provide services that track web 2.0 users

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