The Daily Populous

Wednesday October 6th, 2021 evening edition

image for European Parliament calls for a ban on facial recognition

The European Parliament today called for a ban on police use of facial recognition technology in public places, and on predictive policing, a controversial practice that involves using AI tools in hopes of profiling potential criminals before a crime is even committed.

In a resolution adopted overwhelmingly in favor, MEPs also asked for a ban on private facial recognition databases, like the ones used by the controversial company Clearview AI.

The Parliament also supports the European Commission's attempt in its AI bill to ban social scoring systems, such as the ones launched by China that rate citizens' trustworthiness based on their behavior.

“This is a huge win for all European citizens,” said Petar Vitanov (S&D), the resolution's author.

The non-biding resolution sends a strong signal on how the Parliament is likely to vote in upcoming negotiations of the AI Act.

The European Commission’s proposal of the bill restricts the use of remote biometric identification — including facial recognition technology — in public places unless it is to fight “serious” crime, such as kidnappings and terrorism.

The AI Act’s lead negotiator, Brando Benifei (S&D) and almost all of his co-negotiators from other political groups in the Parliament have called for a blanket ban on facial recognition. »

Texas man sentenced to 15 months in prison for posting Covid-19 hoax on social media

Authored by edition.cnn.com
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(CNN) A Texas man was sentenced to more than a year in federal prison for spreading a hoax related to Covid-19 on social media, prosecutors said.

Perez was found guilty of two counts for violating a federal law that criminalizes false information and hoaxes related to biological weapons, prosecutors said.

Perez did not pay someone to intentionally spread coronavirus at grocery stores, according to investigators and Perez's own admissions," prosecutors said in the news release. »

Revealed: pipeline company paid Minnesota police for arresting and surveilling protesters

Authored by theguardian.com
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It’s common for protesters opposing pipeline construction to face private security hired by companies, as they did during demonstrations against the Dakota Access pipeline.

But in Minnesota, a financial agreement with a foreign company has given public police forces an incentive to arrest demonstrators.

Enbridge told the Guardian an independent account manager allocates the funds, and police decide when protesters are breaking the law. »

Captured, Killed or Compromised: C.I.A. Admits to Losing Dozens of Informants

Authored by nytimes.com
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The cable reminded C.I.A. case officers to focus not just on recruiting sources, but also on security issues including vetting informants and evading adversarial intelligence services.

Still, the memo outlining a specific number of informants arrested or killed by adversarial powers is an unusual level of detail, one that signals the importance of the current problems.

Former officials said that counterintelligence officials typically like to keep such details secret even from the broad C.I.A. work force. »