The Royal Canadian Mounted Police of British Columbia broke its own standards on facial recognition by partnering with U.S.-based biometrics service IntelCenter, The Tyee reports. The deal, signed in 2016, allowed RCMP to access the 700,000-image database, which was created by lifting facial images from social media and other online sources. RCMP Sgt. Kris Clark indicated the deal was only signed to trial IntelCenter's database.
30 April 2021
British Columbia's RCMP breaks own facial recognition rules
Related stories
A view from Brussels: Will the EU pause the AI Act?
Notes from the Asia-Pacific region: India's digital landscape marches ahead
Navigate 2025: Rise of AI brings novel litigation, copyright issues
Navigate 2025: How individuals' feelings inform AI governance practices
There's no opting-out of universal opt-outs