Bolts: New Orleans May Hand Its Police Live Facial Recognition Tech. Critics Warn It’ll Help ICE.

Bolts: New Orleans May Hand Its Police Live Facial Recognition Tech. Critics Warn It’ll Help ICE. by Piper French:

The cameras are mounted across downtown New Orleans: hanging from balconies on Bourbon Street, bolted to the exterior walls of bars and four-star hotels throughout the French Quarter. For two years, they scanned live footage of unwitting passersby, compared it against a list of wanted suspects, and sent potential matches to New Orleans police officers via an app, despite a city policy forbidding the use of automated facial recognition technology for surveillance. The entity behind this operation is not the city’s police department but a nonprofit called Project NOLA, which buys and places the cameras, maintains the database of suspects, and even monitors the footage in an office on the University of New Orleans campus. After the New Orleans Police Department’s informal arrangement with Project NOLA was uncovered by The Washington Post in May, the city has moved to officially authorize the use of live facial recognition analysis.

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