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Isabella Torregiani
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(Phil Mosley/Unsplash)
Experts are raising concerns over the Transportation Security Administrationβs growing use of facial recognition technology at airport checkpoints. While intended to streamline security, critics say it poses serious risks to passenger privacy.
The technology

The system matches a live photo to a travelerβs ID. (Omar Prestwich/Unsplash)
The TSA has rolled out facial recognition systems across airports nationwide. The system captures a real-time photo of a travelerβs face and compares it to their ID to confirm their identity. Though designed for speed and security, privacy advocates are alarmed. Some warn of long-term consequences if the government continues collecting and storing facial data, especially given past privacy breaches within the Department of Homeland Security.
Lawmakers push back

A bipartisan bill ensures passengers can opt out without penalty. (MEGA)
A bipartisan bill led by Senators Jeff Merkley and John Kennedy seeks to strengthen passengersβ rights by ensuring they can opt out of facial recognition scans without facing penalties or extra scrutiny. βThe TSA subjects countless law-abiding Americans to excessive facial recognition screenings as they travel, invading passengersβ privacy without even making it clear that they can opt out of the screening,β Kennedy said, according to Reuters. βFolks donβt want a national surveillance state, but thatβs exactly what the TSAβs unchecked expansion of facial recognition technology is leading us to,β Merkley also said back in May.
Opt-out policy

The opt-out program isnβt always enforced. (Rocker STA/Unsplash)
Although TSA claims that travelers can opt out of facial recognition without added inconvenience, the U.S. Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board reports that this isnβt consistently enforced. According to the board, some TSA agents may not be informing passengers of their right to decline the scan. Others may not be following the official opt-out process at all.
Reports of pressure

Some travelers feel pressured when choosing to opt out. (Erik Odiin/Unsplash)
The Algorithmic Justice League, an advocacy group focused on the harms of AI, published findings that include traveler accounts of being pressured when choosing to opt out. βFlying is so fraught that even when people have rights theyβre terrified to exercise them,β said Albert Fox Cahn, executive director of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project.
The post Experts issue warning about TSAβs new technology appeared first on Knewz.
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