Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1337
Homeland Security wants airport face scans for US citizens
Homeland Security is joining the ranks of government agencies pushing for wider use of facial recognition for US travelers. The department has proposed that US citizens, not just visa holders and visitors, should go through a mandatory facial recognition check when they enter or leave the country. This would ostensibly help officials catch terrorists using stolen travel documents to move about. The existing rules specifically exempt citizens and permanent residents from face scans.
It won't surprise you to hear that civil rights advocates object to the potential expansion. ACLU Senior Policy Analyst Jay Stanley said in a statement that the government was "reneging" on a longstanding promise to spare citizens from this "intrusive surveillance technology." He also contended that this was an unfair burden on people using their "constitutional right to travel," and pointed to abuses of power, data breaches and potential bias as strong reasons to avoid expanding use of the technology.
Via: TechCrunch
(Score: 2) by Codesmith on Tuesday December 03 2019, @09:09PM
Oh I get that Runaway is making an analogy, but it's a very poor one.
One is continual goverment creep into areas they don't need to go, the other is a realisation that humans are poor judges of risk and therefore an adjustment of law is for the societal good.
Pro utilitate hominum.