What you need to know about face surveillance Kade Crockford

How many of you
have ever heard someone say

privacy is dead?

Raise your hand.

How many of you have heard someone say

they don’t care about their privacy
because they don’t have anything to hide?

Go on.

(Laughter)

Now, how many of you
use any kind of encryption software?

Raise your hand.

Or a password
to protect an online account?

Or curtains or blinds
on your windows at home?

(Laughter)

OK, so that’s everyone, I think.

(Laughter)

So why do you do these things?

My guess is,

it’s because you care about your privacy.

The idea that privacy is dead is a myth.

The idea that people
don’t care about their privacy

because “they have nothing to hide”

or they’ve done nothing wrong

is also a myth.

I’m guessing that you would not want
to publicly share on the internet,

for the world to see,

all of your medical records.

Or your search histories
from your phone or your computer.

And I bet

that if the government
wanted to put a chip in your brain

to transmit every one of your thoughts
to a centralized government computer,

you would balk at that.

(Laughter)

That’s because you care
about your privacy,

like every human being.

So, our world has changed fast.

And today, there is understandably
a lot of confusion

about what privacy is and why it matters.

Privacy is not secrecy.

It’s control.

I share information with my doctor
about my body and my health,

expecting that she is not
going to turn around

and share that information
with my parents,

or my boss or my kids.

That information is private, not secret.

I’m in control over how
that information is shared.

You’ve probably heard people say
that there’s a fundamental tension

between privacy on the one hand

and safety on the other.

But the technologies
that advance our privacy

also advance our safety.

Think about fences, door locks,

curtains on our windows, passwords,

encryption software.

All of these technologies

simultaneously protect
our privacy and our safety.

Dragnet surveillance,
on the other hand, protects neither.

In recent years,

the federal government
tasked a group of experts

called The Privacy and Civil Liberties
Oversight Board

with examining post-9/11
government surveillance programs,

dragnet surveillance programs.

Those experts could not find
a single example

of that dragnet surveillance
advancing any safety –

didn’t identify or stop
a single terrorist attack.

You know what that information
was useful for, though?

Helping NSA employees
spy on their romantic interests.

(Laughter)

(Audience: Wow.)

Another example is closer to home.

So millions of people
across the United States and the world

are adopting so-called
“smart home” devices,

like internet-connected
surveillance cameras.

But we know that any technology
connected to the internet

can be hacked.

And so if a hacker

gets into your internet-connected
surveillance camera at home,

they can watch you
and your family coming and going,

finding just the right time to strike.

You know what can’t be hacked remotely?

Curtains.

(Laughter)

Fences.

Door locks.

(Laughter)

Privacy is not the enemy of safety.

It is its guarantor.

Nonetheless, we daily face
a propaganda onslaught

telling us that we have to give up
some privacy in exchange for safety

through surveillance programs.

Face surveillance is the most dangerous
of these technologies.

There are two primary ways today
governments use technologies like this.

One is face recognition.

That’s to identify someone in an image.

The second is face surveillance,

which can be used in concert

with surveillance-camera
networks and databases

to create records of all people’s
public movements,

habits and associations,

effectively creating a digital panopticon.

This is a panopticon.

It’s a prison designed to allow
a few guards in the center

to monitor everything happening
in the cells around the perimeter.

The people in those prison cells
can’t see inside the guard tower,

but the guards can see
into every inch of those cells.

The idea here

is that if the people
in those prison cells

know they’re being watched all the time,

or could be,

they’ll behave accordingly.

Similarly, face surveillance
enables a centralized authority –

in this case, the state –

to monitor the totality
of human movement and association

in public space.

And here’s what it looks like

in real life.

In this case, it’s not a guard in a tower,

but rather a police analyst
in a spy center.

The prison expands beyond its walls,

encompassing everyone,

everywhere, all the time.

In a free society,

this should terrify us all.

For decades now, we’ve watched cop shows

that push a narrative that says

technologies like face surveillance
ultimately serve the public good.

But real life is not a cop drama.

The bad guy didn’t always do it,

the cops definitely
aren’t always the good guys

and the technology doesn’t always work.

Take the case of Steve Talley,

a financial analyst from Colorado.

In 2015, Talley was arrested,
and he was charged with bank robbery

on the basis of an error
in a facial recognition system.

Talley fought that case

and he eventually was cleared
of those charges,

but while he was being
persecuted by the state,

he lost his house, his job and his kids.

Steve Talley’s case is an example

of what can happen
when the technology fails.

But face surveillance is just as dangerous
when it works as advertized.

Just consider how trivial it would be

for a government agency
to put a surveillance camera

outside a building where people meet
for Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.

They could connect that camera

to a face-surveillance algorithm
and a database,

press a button and sit back and collect

a record of every person
receiving treatment for alcoholism.

It would be just as easy
for a government agency

to use this technology
to automatically identify

every person who attended
the Women’s March

or a Black Lives Matter protest.

Even the technology industry
is aware of the gravity of this problem.

Microsoft’s president Brad Smith
has called on Congress to intervene.

Google, for its part,

has publicly declined
to ship a face surveillance product,

in part because of these grave
human and civil rights concerns.

And that’s a good thing.

Because ultimately,

protecting our open society
is much more important

than corporate profit.

The ACLU’s nationwide campaign

to get the government to pump the brakes

on the adoption
of this dangerous technology

has prompted reasonable questions
from thoughtful people.

What makes this technology
in particular so dangerous?

Why can’t we just regulate it?

In short, why the alarm?

Face surveillance is uniquely dangerous
for two related reasons.

One is the nature
of the technology itself.

And the second is that our system

fundamentally lacks the oversight
and accountability mechanisms

that would be necessary

to ensure it would not be abused
in the government’s hands.

First, face surveillance enables
a totalizing form of surveillance

never before possible.

Every single person’s every visit
to a friend’s house,

a government office,

a house of worship,

a Planned Parenthood,

a cannabis shop,

a strip club;

every single person’s public movements,
habits and associations

documented and catalogued,

not on one day, but on every day,

merely with the push of a button.

This kind of totalizing mass surveillance

fundamentally threatens
what it means to live in a free society.

Our freedom of speech,
freedom of association,

freedom of religion,

freedom of the press,

our privacy,

our right to be left alone.

You may be thinking,

“OK, come on, but there are tons
of ways the government can spy on us.”

And yes, it’s true,

the government can track us
through our cell phones,

but if I want to go to get an abortion,

or attend a political meeting,

or even just call in sick
and play hooky and go to the beach …

(Laughter)

I can leave my phone at home.

I cannot leave my face at home.

And that brings me
to my second primary concern:

How we might meaningfully
regulate this technology.

Today, if the government wants to know
where I was last week,

they can’t just hop into a time machine
and go back in time and follow me.

And they also, the local police right now,

don’t maintain any centralized
system of tracking,

where they’re cataloging every person’s
public movements all the time,

just in case that information
some day becomes useful.

Today, if the government
wants to know where I was last week,

or last month or last year,

they have to go to a judge, get a warrant

and then serve that warrant
on my phone company,

which by the way, has a financial interest
in protecting my privacy.

With face surveillance,

no such limitations exist.

This is technology that is 100 percent
controlled by the government itself.

So how would a warrant requirement
work in this context?

Is the government going to go to a judge

and get a warrant,

and then serve the warrant on themselves?

That would be like me giving you my diary,

and saying, “Here,
you can hold on to this forever,

but you can’t read it
until I say it’s OK.”

So what can we do?

The only answer to the threat

posed by the government’s use
of face surveillance

is to deny the government the capacity
to violate the public’s trust,

by denying the government the ability

to build these in-house
face-surveillance networks.

And that’s exactly what we’re doing.

The ACLU is part of a nationwide campaign

to pump the brakes on the government’s use
of this dangerous technology.

We’ve already been successful,

from San Francisco
to Somerville, Massachusetts,

we have passed municipal bans

on the government’s
use of this technology.

And plenty of other communities
here in Massachusetts

and across the country

are debating similar measures.

Some people have told me
that this movement is bound to fail.

That ultimately,

merely because the technology exists,

it will be deployed in every context

by every government everywhere.

Privacy is dead, right?

So the narrative goes.

Well, I refuse to accept that narrative.

And you should, too.

We can’t allow Jeff Bezos or the FBI

to determine the boundaries
of our freedoms in the 21st century.

If we live in a democracy,

we are in the driver’s seat,

shaping our collective future.

We are at a fork in the road right now.

We can either continue
with business as usual,

allowing governments to adopt and deploy
these technologies unchecked,

in our communities, our streets
and our schools,

or we can take bold action now

to press pause on the government’s use
of face surveillance,

protect our privacy

and to build a safer, freer future

for all of us.

Thank you.

(Applause and cheers)

你们中
有多少人曾听过有人说

隐私已死?

举手。

你们中有多少人听过有人说

他们不关心自己的隐私,
因为他们没有什么可隐瞒的?

继续。

(笑声)

现在,你们中有多少人
使用任何类型的加密软件?

举手。

还是
保护在线帐户的密码?

还是
家里窗户上的窗帘或百叶窗?

(笑声)

好吧,我想这就是每个人。

(笑声)

那你为什么要做这些事情?

我的猜测是,

这是因为您关心自己的隐私。

隐私已死的想法是一个神话。

人们
不关心自己的隐私

是因为“他们没有什么可隐瞒的”

或者他们没有做错任何事情,这种想法

也是一个神话。

我猜你不想
在互联网上公开分享

你所有的医疗记录,让全世界看到。

或者
您的手机或计算机上的搜索历史记录。

我敢打赌

,如果政府
想在你的大脑中植入一个芯片,将你的

每一个想法传输
到中央政府的计算机上,

你会犹豫不决。

(笑声)

那是因为你
关心你的隐私,

就像每个人一样。

所以,我们的世界变化很快。

今天,人们

对什么是隐私以及它为何重要存在很多困惑,这是可以理解的。

隐私不是秘密。

是控制。

我与我的医生分享
关于我的身体和健康的信息,

期望她
不会转身

与我的父母、

老板或孩子分享这些信息。

这些信息是私人的,不是秘密的。

我可以控制
这些信息的共享方式。

您可能听说过人们
说,

一方面隐私

与另一方面安全之间存在根本性的紧张关系。

但是
,促进我们隐私的技术

也促进了我们的安全。

想想栅栏、门锁、

窗户上的窗帘、密码、

加密软件。

所有这些技术

同时保护
我们的隐私和安全。 另一方面

,Dragnet 监视
既不保护也不保护。

近年来

,联邦政府
委派了一个

名为隐私和公民自由
监督委员会的专家小组,

负责审查 9/11 后的
政府监视计划、

拉网监视计划。

那些专家找不到
任何一个提高任何安全

性的拉网监视的例子
——

没有识别或阻止
一次恐怖袭击。

不过,你知道这些信息
有什么用吗?

帮助 NSA 员工
监视他们的浪漫兴趣。

(笑声)

(观众:哇。)

另一个例子是离家更近。

因此,
美国和世界各地的数百万人

正在采用所谓的
“智能家居”设备,

例如联网
监控摄像头。

但我们知道,任何
连接到互联网的技术

都可能被黑客入侵。

因此,如果黑客

进入您家中联网的
监控摄像头,

他们可以看到您
和您的家人来来去去,

寻找合适的攻击时间。

你知道什么不能被远程入侵吗?

窗帘。

(笑声)

栅栏。

门锁。

(笑声)

隐私不是安全的敌人。

是它的保证人。

尽管如此,我们每天都面临
着宣传冲击,

告诉我们我们必须放弃
一些隐私,以

通过监视程序来换取安全。

面部监控是
这些技术中最危险的。

当今
政府使用此类技术有两种主要方式。

一是人脸识别。

那是在图像中识别某人。

第二个是面部监控,

它可以

与监控摄像头
网络和数据库

一起使用,以创建所有人的
公共活动、

习惯和协会的记录,

有效地创建一个数字全景。

这是一个圆形监狱。

这是一个监狱,旨在让
中心的几个警卫

监视
周边牢房中发生的一切。

那些牢房里的人是
看不到看守塔里面的,

但看守们却能看到
牢房的每一寸。

这里的想法

是,如果
那些牢房里的人

知道他们一直在被监视,

或者可能会被监视,

他们就会做出相应的行为。

同样,面部监控
使中央权威——

在这种情况下为国家——

能够监控公共空间
中人类活动和交往的总体情况

这就是它

在现实生活中的样子。

在这种情况下,它不是塔楼里的警卫,

而是
间谍中心的警察分析员。

监狱向外扩张,无时无刻不在

包围着每一个人,

无处不在。

在一个自由的社会中,

这应该让我们所有人感到恐惧。

几十年来,我们一直在观看警察节目

,这些节目推动了一种说法,即

面部监控等技术
最终服务于公共利益。

但现实生活不是警匪剧。

坏人并不总是这样做

,警察绝对
不是好人

,技术也并不总是有效。

以科罗拉多州的金融分析师史蒂夫·塔利为例。

2015 年,塔利被捕
,他因面部识别系统出现错误而被指控犯有银行抢劫罪

塔利与那个案子进行了抗争,

最终他
的这些指控被清除了,

但是当他
受到国家的迫害时,

他失去了他的房子、他的工作和他的孩子。

史蒂夫·塔利 (Steve Talley) 的案例是技术失败时可能发生的情况的一个例子

但是,当面部监控
像广告宣传的那样起作用时,它同样危险。

试想一下

,政府
机构将监控摄像头

放在人们开会
参加酗酒者匿名会议的建筑物外是多么微不足道。

他们可以将相机连接

到面部监控算法
和数据库,

按下按钮然后坐下来收集

每个
接受酒精中毒治疗的人的记录。

政府机构可以很容易

地使用这项技术
来自动识别

每个
参加妇女游行

或黑人生活问题抗议的人。

甚至科技行业
也意识到了这个问题的严重性。

微软总裁布拉德
史密斯呼吁国会进行干预。

就其本身而言,谷歌

已公开
拒绝发布面部监控产品

,部分原因是这些严重的
人权和公民权利问题。

这是一件好事。

因为归根结底,

保护我们的开放社会

比企业利润重要得多。

ACLU 的全国性

运动让政府停止

采用这种危险的技术,这

引发
了有思想的人们提出合理的问题。

是什么让这项
技术特别危险?

为什么我们不能规范它?

简而言之,为什么要报警?

由于两个相关的原因,人脸监视特别危险。

一是
技术本身的性质。

第二个是我们的系统

从根本上缺乏

确保它不会被
政府滥用所必需的监督和问责机制。

首先,面部监控实现
了前所未有的全面监控形式

每个人每次
去朋友家

、政府办公室

、礼拜堂

、计划生育

、大麻店

、脱衣舞俱乐部;

每个人的公共活动、
习惯和协会都

记录和编目,

不是一天,而是每一天,

只需按一下按钮。

这种全面的大规模监视

从根本上
威胁到生活在自由社会中的意义。

我们的言论自由、
结社

自由、宗教自由、

新闻自由、

我们的隐私、

我们独处的权利。

你可能会想,

“好吧,来吧,但是
政府可以通过很多方式监视我们。”

是的,这是真的

,政府可以
通过我们的手机追踪我们,

但如果我想去堕胎,

或参加政治会议,

甚至只是请病假
,逃学去海滩……

(笑声)

我可以把手机留在家里。

我不能把脸留在家里。

这让我想到了
我的第二个主要关注点:

我们如何有效地
规范这项技术。

今天,如果政府想
知道我上周在哪里,

他们不能只是跳进时光机
,回到过去跟着我。

而且他们,现在的当地警察,

没有维护任何集中
的跟踪系统

,他们一直在对每个人的
公共活动进行分类,

以防万一这些信息
有一天变得有用。

今天,如果政府
想知道我上周、

上个月或去年

在哪里,他们必须去找法官,拿到搜查令

,然后将搜查令送达
我的电话公司

,顺便说一句,我的电话公司有财务 有
兴趣保护我的隐私。

有了面部监控,

就不存在这样的限制。

这是100%
由政府自己控制的技术。

那么
在这种情况下,权证要求将如何运作?

政府是否会去找法官

并获得逮捕令,

然后将逮捕令送达自己?

这就像我给你我的日记,

然后说,“在这里,
你可以永远坚持下去,

但除非我说没关系,否则你不能阅读它
。”

所以,我们能做些什么?

对政府使用面部监控所构成的威胁的唯一答案

是否认政府有
能力破坏公众的信任

,否认政府有

能力建立这些内部
面部监控网络。

这正是我们正在做的。

ACLU 是全国范围

内阻止政府
使用这种危险技术的运动的一部分。

我们已经成功了,

从旧金山
到马萨诸塞州萨默维尔,

我们通过了市政禁令,

禁止政府
使用这项技术。

马萨诸塞州

和全国各地的许多其他社区

都在讨论类似的措施。

有人告诉我
,这场运动注定要失败。

最终,

仅仅因为该技术存在,

它就会被

世界各地的每个政府部署在每个环境中。

隐私已经死了,对吧?

故事就这样进行了。

好吧,我拒绝接受这种说法。

你也应该这样做。

我们不能让杰夫贝索斯或联邦调查局

决定
我们在 21 世纪自由的界限。

如果我们生活在民主国家,

我们就坐在驾驶座上,

塑造着我们共同的未来。

我们现在正处于一个岔路口。

我们可以
继续照常营业,

让政府

在我们的社区、街道
和学校中不受限制地采用和部署这些技术,

或者我们现在可以采取大胆的行动

,暂停政府
使用面部监控,

保护我们的隐私

并为我们所有人建立一个更安全、更自由的未来

谢谢你。

(掌声和欢呼)