NPR: Live cameras are tracking faces in New Orleans. Who should control them?

NPR: Live cameras are tracking faces in New Orleans. Who should control them? by Martin Kaste (“New Orleans, home of Bourbon Street revelry, has become the first American city known to have a live facial recognition network. How that came to be is a story of private initiative and political inaction, and may point to the future public safety uses of this surveillance technology. Police around the country routinely use facial recognition after a crime, to speed up the identification of suspects caught on camera. But live facial recognition, which can name and track a person moving around a city in real time, has been slower to catch on in the U.S. Aside from isolated experiments, police departments have shied away from the technology, fearing a backlash over privacy.”)

When a face matches one of the approximately 250 people on Project NOLA’s “hot lists,” a computer voice alerts the staff.

“That said ‘Tier Two Hot List,'” Lagarde explains as an alert sounds. “That is going to be somebody that we’ve seen recently, with a gun, involved in gang activity.”

On busy days, Lagarde says, there are hundreds of hits. Some targets are wanted by federal, state or local agencies. Others are people Lagarde is tracking on his own initiative, because of their apparent involvement in felony-level criminal activity.

This entry was posted in Facial recognition. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.