Digital privacy advocates praised the Oakland City Council in California for unanimously approving a local ordinance that bans public agencies, including police, from “acquiring, obtaining, retaining, requesting, or accessing” facial recognition technology—following the lead of San Francisco and Somerville, Massachusetts.
“These decisions should be made as Somerville, San Francisco, and now Oakland just made: by the public, including the communities that will be most impacted, through an affirmative vote by their elected representatives.”
—Matt Cagle, ACLU of Northern California
On the heels of Oakland’s Tuesday night vote—which will be followed by a second, procedural vote in mid-September—the Public Safety Committee of the Berkeley City Council was slated to meet Wednesday to finalize a similar proposal.
In the absence of federal regulations, local policymakers and privacy advocates have been working together to craft and enact bans on local government using facial recognition technology in their communities. Some of the measures are part of the ACLU’s Community Control Over Police Surveillance (CCOPS) effort, launched in 2016.
Matt Cagle, technology and civil liberties attorney with the ACLU of Northern California, welcomed the news out of Oakland in a statement Wednesday.
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“Decisions about whether we want to hand the government the power to identify who attends protests, political rallies, church, or AA meetings should not be made in the secret backroom of a police station, lobbied by corporate executives that market this technology,” said Cagle. “These decisions should be made as Somerville, San Francisco, and now Oakland just made: by the public, including the communities that will be most impacted, through an affirmative vote by their elected representatives.”
VICE reported Wednesday on the motivation behind Oakland’s ordinance:
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