
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Law-enforcement agencies, including those in Maryland, are making more use of facial recognition technology. This software attempts to identify human faces by matching images or video from surveillance cameras to massive databases of pictures.
Proponents say it’s an important tool to keep the public safe. Privacy advocates say it’s a dangerous tool, far too likely to misidentify people. Some point to the experience of a Baltimore County man launched into a harrowing ordeal when police used facial recognition technology.
We talk with Eyal Press, who went deep into what happened in the pages of the The New Yorker.
Later in the show, we talk to a critic of facial recognition technology, Samantha Masters. She is with Organizing Black, a community organizing group in Baltimore city.
Photo by Jonathan McIntosh, via Flickr.
Do you have a question or comment about a show or a story idea to pitch? Contact On the Record at: Senior Supervising Producer, Maureen Harvie she/her/hers [email protected] 410-235-1903 Senior Producer, Melissa Gerr she/her/hers [email protected] 410-235-1157 Producer Sam Bermas-Dawes he/him/his [email protected] 410-235-1472
4
99 ratings
Law-enforcement agencies, including those in Maryland, are making more use of facial recognition technology. This software attempts to identify human faces by matching images or video from surveillance cameras to massive databases of pictures.
Proponents say it’s an important tool to keep the public safe. Privacy advocates say it’s a dangerous tool, far too likely to misidentify people. Some point to the experience of a Baltimore County man launched into a harrowing ordeal when police used facial recognition technology.
We talk with Eyal Press, who went deep into what happened in the pages of the The New Yorker.
Later in the show, we talk to a critic of facial recognition technology, Samantha Masters. She is with Organizing Black, a community organizing group in Baltimore city.
Photo by Jonathan McIntosh, via Flickr.
Do you have a question or comment about a show or a story idea to pitch? Contact On the Record at: Senior Supervising Producer, Maureen Harvie she/her/hers [email protected] 410-235-1903 Senior Producer, Melissa Gerr she/her/hers [email protected] 410-235-1157 Producer Sam Bermas-Dawes he/him/his [email protected] 410-235-1472
9,166 Listeners
2,238 Listeners
38,189 Listeners
6,696 Listeners
10,706 Listeners
43 Listeners
29 Listeners
86,750 Listeners
230 Listeners
7 Listeners
111,917 Listeners
25,112 Listeners
56,285 Listeners
2,327 Listeners
57 Listeners
10,141 Listeners
3 Listeners
39 Listeners
11 Listeners
6,070 Listeners
8 Listeners
15,335 Listeners
10,613 Listeners