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Chairman Chaffetz (R-UT): “So here’s the problem – you’re required by law to put out a privacy statement and you didn’t. And now we’re supposed to trust you with hundreds of millions of people’s faces in a system that you couldn’t protect even with the 702 issue.”
Washington D.C. – On Wednesday the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform questioned Kimberly Del Greco, Deputy Assistant Director at the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services Division, about why the bureau broke the law by failing to file a privacy impact statement acknowledging the collection of millions of Americans’ faces for the agency’s new biometric identification system.
The Committee reports that nearly half of all adult Americans’ photographs are in the database. The 2013 U.S. Census Bureau estimated that there are over 242 million adults living in the U.S. If the Committee’s numbers are correct, over 121 million adults are in the FBI’s database.
Committee Chairman Congressman Jason Chaffetz (R- Utah) scolded Ms. Del Greco for the FBI’s failures. “The failure here is years after you were supposed to make it public,” Chaffetz stated.
“You were using it in real world circumstances, you were actually using it and didn’t issue the statement.”
Chaffetz also asked Del Greco whether the FBI had plans to gather faceprints via social media. “Are you collecting that information that is available on social media?,” the chairman demanded. “We do not have any other photos in our repository.”
With NGI, the FBI will expand the number of uploaded photographs and provide investigators with ‘automated facial recognition search capability.’
The FBI intends to do this by eliminating restrictions on the number of submitted photographs (including photographs that are not accompanied by tenprint fingerprints) and allowing the submission of non-facial photographs (e.g. scars or tattoos).
The FBI also widely disseminates this NGI data. According to the FBI’s latest NGI fact sheet, 24,510 local, state, tribal, federal and international partners submitted queries to NGI in September 2016.
Rep. Paul Mitchell (R-MI) also questioned Del Greco regarding the FBI’s activities. “I think the issue goes beyond the First Amendment concerns that were expressed. . .and is broader,” Mitchell stated during the panel.
“I don’t want to just protect someone if they’re in a political protest from being identified, the reality is we should protect everybody unless there is a valid documented criminal justice action."
Duncan worried that Americans looking at the information, “would wonder if were ending up in a federal police state that’s gotten totally out of control, and has far too much power.”
“I think we’re reaching a very sad point, a very dangerous point, when we’re doing away with the reasonable expectation of privacy about anything.”
A major privacy group has filed a lawsuit against the FBI to force the bureau to release all relevant documents about its plan to share a huge amount of biometric information with the Department of Defense.
Privacy advocates, including EPIC, have said that the new database presents serious problems because of the high error rates seen with facial recognition systems. Also, the collection and storage of that data is a significant risk for the people whose information is in the database.
The FBI is working to keep information contained in a key biometric database private and unavailable, even to people whose information is contained in the records.
originally posted by: oxford
WOAH an FBI biometric database with a file on every American - Geeeeeeezus
originally posted by: oxford
WOAH an FBI biometric database with a file on every American - Geeeeeeezus
originally posted by: ganjoa
originally posted by: oxford
WOAH an FBI biometric database with a file on every American - Geeeeeeezus
Plus residents and visitors legally in the country.
Maybe some not so legal as well.
Now the cat's out of the bag, I wonder if the information collection & use will surge or decline over the short term, until the dust settles on these investigations and resultant remedies...
ganjoa
originally posted by: ausername
originally posted by: oxford
WOAH an FBI biometric database with a file on every American - Geeeeeeezus
With the databases of all of the agencies combined, they probably know far more about you than you know about yourself.