DE | EN
Sitemap | Impressum
web2.0 Diaspora Vimeo taz We at Mastodon A-FsA Song RSS Twitter Youtube Tumblr Flickr Wikipedia Donation Facebook Bitmessage Betterplace Tor-Netzwerk https-everywhere
01.01.2018 Keine erkennungsdienstliche Behandlung an Flughäfen!

No biometric surveillance at airports

As millions of people face long airport lines and invasive security screenings over the holidays, Congress is considering a bill that would turn this annual ritual into a much more alarming intrusion of privacy.

The innocent-sounding TSA Modernization Act (S. 1872) directs the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to start deploying facial recognition and other biometric technology in airports. If the bill passes, the TSA would use this data to track, store and share information about our movements as we travel.

Tell Congress: Prevent the unchecked expansion of biometric surveillance of innocent Americans. Reject the TSA Modernization Act.

Although Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) agents already use facial recognition screening on passengers on certain international flights, this bill would dramatically step up surveillance of innocent people. If it passes, the TSA and CBP would start deploying biometric technology – things like fingerprinting, retina scans and facial recognition – at checkpoints, screen lanes, bag drops and boarding areas.

This has big implications for our privacy and civil liberties. Although these agencies are supposed to delete facial images after 14 days, they can keep and even share them with other local, state and federal authorities. Facial recognition technology has problems with accuracy – especially for non-white people, who are much more likely to be targeted for surveillance. But even if the technology improves, dramatically increasing government surveillance is dangerous. There is no guarantee that data won't be hacked by thieves or foreign governments, misused by rogue government employees, or used to spy on activists or dissenters.

This very personal kind of surveillance could become increasingly ubiquitous. The Department of Homeland Security is considering facial recognition drones, which could be used at interior checkpoints – anywhere within 100 miles of a border.5 About two-thirds of Americans live within that area, making "border security" a meaningless term that allows the government to conduct surveillance on anyone at any time.

Read more and sign petiton https://act.credoaction.com/sign/stop-biometric-surveillance


Category[21]: Unsere Themen in der Presse Short-Link to this page: a-fsa.de/e/2S7
Link to this page: https://www.aktion-freiheitstattangst.org/de/articles/6313-20180101-keine-erkennungsdienstliche-behandlung-an-flughaefen.html
Link with Tor: http://a6pdp5vmmw4zm5tifrc3qo2pyz7mvnk4zzimpesnckvzinubzmioddad.onion/de/articles/6313-20180101-keine-erkennungsdienstliche-behandlung-an-flughaefen.html
Tags: #Grundrechte #Menschenrechte #Anonymisierung #Meinungsfreiheit #Pressefreiheit #Arbeitnehmerdatenschutz #Verbraucherdatenschutz #Datenschutz #Datensicherheit #Biometrie #Bestandsdaten #Datenbanken #Retina #Videoüberwachung #Lauschangriff #Überwachung #Vorratsdatenspeicherung #DHS #USA #Flughäfen
Created: 2018-01-01 21:07:33
Hits: 1555

Leave a Comment

If you like a crypted answer you may copy your
public key into this field. (Optional)
To prevent the use of this form by spam robots, please enter the portrayed character set in the left picture below into the right field.

CC license   European Civil Liberties Network   Bundesfreiwilligendienst   We don't store your data   World Beyond War   Use Tor router   Use HTTPS   No Java   For Transparency

logos Mitglied im European Civil Liberties Network Creative Commons Bundesfreiwilligendienst We don't store user data World Beyond War Tor - The onion router HTTPS - use encrypted connections We don't use JavaScript For transparency in the civil society