Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Privacy United States

Portland Passes Groundbreaking Ban on Facial Recognition in Stores, Banks, Restaurants and More (medium.com) 264

Amid sometimes violent protests and counter-protests around racial justice, this week Portland, Oregon legislators unanimously passed groundbreaking new legislation to ban the use of facial recognition technology, which some see as a victory for civil rights and digital justice. The ban covers use of the technology in both privately owned places as well as by city agencies. From a report: "I believe what we're passing is model legislation that the rest of the country will be emulating as soon as we have completed our work here," said Portland City Council Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty during today's city council session. "This is really about making sure that we are prioritizing our most vulnerable community members and community members of color." Hardesty has been a vocal advocate for a facial recognition ban in the city for over a year. Established as two pieces of companion legislation, one ordinance makes Portland the first U.S. city to prohibit use of facial recognition technologies inside privately owned places accessible to the public, such as stores, banks, Airbnb rentals, restaurants, entertainment venues, public transit stations, homeless shelters, senior centers, law and doctors' offices, and a variety of other businesses. Further reading: Amazon Spent $24,000 To Kill Portland's Facial Recognition Ban.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Portland Passes Groundbreaking Ban on Facial Recognition in Stores, Banks, Restaurants and More

Comments Filter:
  • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Thursday September 10, 2020 @11:48AM (#60492238) Homepage Journal

    Amid sometimes violent protests

    Amid sometimes violent protests? When, in the past 3 months have there not been violent protests in Portland?

  • Am I no longer allowed to use my face to login to my cellphone or laptop?

    • You can do whatever you want to yourself, even masturbate. But just because you can do something to yourself doesn't mean that anyone can do it to you if you don't want to.
  • I guess if I go into any of these places in Portland I have to close my eyes so I don't recognize anybody. That would make life too difficult for the criminal, which we cannot have, can we? They are just good people trying to make a dishonest buck, right?

    {+,+}

  • Are we still allowed to employ manual facial recognition in Portland, or will that be slowly phased out as well?

  • by sentiblue ( 3535839 ) on Thursday September 10, 2020 @11:58AM (#60492292)
    Violence has been going on for months, the local authorities won't stop it
    Federal agents standing by to help, they won't allow it
    The only evidence we have of these crimes are surveilance cameras, those will now be banned

    It seems to me as if party politics is more important than lives, safety, decency.
    • see my post above, 93% of the protests are peaceful [time.com].

      Local authorities aren't stopping the violence because the cops are actively encouraging it. They ignore the violent protestors and arrest the peaceful ones. It's a classic authoritarian tactic. The Nazis used it extensively.

      As for the Feds, unless you're a fascist you do not want their help [fark.com]. Bill Barr is actively trying to use them to get us used to a Federal Police. You know, like a Gestapo.

      You're straw manning. Surveillance cameras are not b
    • You know that there's a pretty wide difference between surveillance cameras and (flawed) facial recognition technology, right?

      Of course you do. You're just going for the reducto ad absurdum argument.

  • by PuddleBoy ( 544111 ) on Thursday September 10, 2020 @12:01PM (#60492308)

    Removing (or using) surveillance cuts both ways. You could have protesters, criminals, Antifa, Proud Boys, martians appearing on-camera.

    The technology does not care.

    I don't think it helps to tie tech to politics. We should evaluate situations for greatest good, if possible.

    But I would love to see a martian. :)

    • I like this. Banning facial recognition is actually an Area 51 conspiracy; aliens have escaped into Portland and all surveillance must be stopped to suppress the evidence!
      • I like this. Banning facial recognition is actually an Area 51 conspiracy; aliens have escaped into Portland and all surveillance must be stopped to suppress the evidence!

        Ha ha ha ha. Come up with an alien theory so everyone can laugh and dismiss it as crazy...

        Now you and I are safer from the humans if we can get them to believe we are just another crazy notion. We must remain vigilant or we will be discovered! [nudge, nudge, wink, wink]

  • It's been shown time and time again that eyewitness accounts are biased and inaccurate. Why not ban what's known to be bad?

  • by Jodka ( 520060 ) on Thursday September 10, 2020 @12:06PM (#60492330)

    from the /. summary:

    one ordinance makes Portland the first U.S. city to prohibit use of facial recognition technologies inside privately owned places accessible to the public

    So if you run the facial recognition software on the video feed in the cloud instead of on servers at the place of business you are good? What if you transfer the video feed to someone outside the legal jurisdiction of Portland and they run facial recognition? Would the Portland police travel to Arkansas to arrest someone for running facial recognition software on a security camera feed from Portland? What if you open the video feed and post it publicly, is that a crime because anyone can run face recognition software on it? Will the Portland police arrest everyone in Portland with a live camera feed because facial recognition software could be run on the feed?

    Any law outlawing a particular type of data processing is idiotic.

    • Would the Portland police travel to Arkansas to arrest someone for running facial recognition software on a security camera feed from Portland?

      The very last people who will attempt to enforce this law will be the Portland police. A unenforced law is moot, but it does make great press for the City Council, doesn't it?

      I have LPR (license plate recognition) cameras installed at my home, in a city where the Metro Council has banned their use. But the council can't stop me from sending license plate photos to

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Thursday September 10, 2020 @12:07PM (#60492332) Journal
    Because technically, just simply having someone's picture in the staff lounge advising them of a known previous shoplifter could be argued to be face-recognition technology.
  • So the State can tell me what to do and not to do with data legally acquired. Bullshit.

  • The government can ban surveillance activities of whichever sort on public property I'm sure. But, on private property? I doubt that's Constitutional.

  • by RossCWilliams ( 5513152 ) on Thursday September 10, 2020 @12:18PM (#60492378)
    You will notice the vote was unanimous. It has nothng to do with protesters, despite the misleading story lead. It has everything to do with preventing a society in which there is 24 hour surveillance of everyone.
    • "Bi-partisan"? Um, no. Read it again. "...today Portland, Oregon legislators unanimously passed ..." Only one party is represented by Portland's elected officials.

  • ...Whoo! Yes, some good news!

    And look at all you snowflakes crying hypocritical tears. Remember when our culture was about freedom? Anti-corporatism? Avoiding dystopia? You're all so blind to progress when it actually happens.

    This is a necessary component of avoiding living in a nuclear-age science-fiction story. We know that, at scale, people cannot track other people without technological tooling. By denying the use of that tooling, we are deliberately crafting a less shitty society.

  • by tiqui ( 1024021 ) on Thursday September 10, 2020 @12:26PM (#60492424)

    Kristina Narayan, a staffer for Democrat Oregon House Speaker Tina Kotek, has been arrested [dailymail.co.uk] at the riots on the weekend after the police apparently got fed up with all the molotov cocktails being thrown at them.

    Apparently, the Democrats running that state now do not want their rioters and looters so easily identified (anti-rioters have had quite a crowd-sourced effort underway for quite a while using security cam videos and facial recog software to ID rioters and then pass the info to the police, and they've ID'd a bunch of them accurately). If you have a business in Portland, you need to consider getting out - it's becoming quite clear that you are having all your normal civil protections removed plank-by-plank.

    Note: I'm personally all for privacy and do not like things like these cams and traffic cams, etc. I'm one of the apparently ever-reducing population that took Orwell's "1984" as a cautionary tale rather than an inspirational one. But the thing that's interesting is that the hard left, who used to at least position themselves as opposed to big brotherism, are fully on-board with every soul-stealing big-government data grab in sight from mandated electronic health records to government deep dives into financials, and online government vehicle and property records, electronic records of travel (for taxation, of course) and they're certainly comfortable with all the soul-sucking data grabs by the tech giants, including all the video chatting (what's big tech doing with all the video and images flowing through their pipes?) but then there's this ONE big brother thing that repels them like a vampire is repelled by the sun: facial recognition cams, particularly where left wing rioters are active. Makes you say "hmmmmmmmmmm"....

  • ... when we implement ID2020. And everyone gets chipped.

    A left wing wet dream, if anyone needs reminding.

  • Anywhere the left gets power the leaders are making sure the community is destroyed.
  • Where the political buildings will all have cctv and facial recognition up the wazoo, because they are a special case.

To the systems programmer, users and applications serve only to provide a test load.

Working...