Amazon would really like U.S. law enforcement to use its facial-recognition software,Watch The Silencing Online despite how its employees feel.
According to internal documents obtained by the Project on Government Oversight, Amazon met with officials from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) over the summer in order to pitch facial-recognition technology known as Rekognition.
SEE ALSO: Here's how to set up a VPN and protect your dataIn June 2018, Amazon Web Services sales representatives met with ICE officials to discuss the government agency’s use of the face-scanning technology. In an email to ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations that followed, Amazon sent “action items” which included "Rekognition Video tagging/analysis, scalability, custom object libraries." The Amazon sales representative went on to thank the agency for its interest in using the company’s technology “to support ICE and the HSI mission.”
Amazon had previously come under fire for its facial-recognition technology just one month prior to Amazon’s meeting with ICE officials. In May, the ACLU obtained documents showing that the online retailer provided law enforcement in Oregon and Orlando with the tech.
At the time, some Amazon workers objected to the company’s technology being used to aid law enforcement in this capacity and urged Amazon to cancel the contracts. Despite this, Amazon would go on to court ICE just weeks later.
SEE ALSO: Amazon's face-ID tool can't even identify members of Congress correctly, ACLU finds"ICE should not be using face recognition for immigration enforcement," ACLU senior legislative counsel Neema Singh Guliani told Mashable. "Congress has never authorized such use and it would be irresponsible to allow this technology to be used to support ICE’s ongoing efforts aimed at terrorizing immigrant communities throughout the country. The public deserves to know whether the agency is deploying or planning to deploy this technology."
As The Daily Beast points out, just this past week during an interview with Wired, Jeff Bezos spoke of current immigration enforcement carried out with ICE. When discussing the migrants, Bezos said “I’d let them in if it was me. I like 'em. I want all of them in.”
Updated 10/23, 8:02 p.m. ET:In response to a query from Mashable, an Amazon Web Services spokesperson provided the following statement: "We participated with a number of other technology companies in technology 'boot camps' sponsored by McKinsey Company, where a number of technologies were discussed, including Rekognition. As we usually do, we followed up with customers who were interested in learning more about how to use our services (Immigration and Customs Enforcement was one of those organizations where there was follow-up discussion)."
Topics Amazon Facial Recognition Politics
A New Year’s Recommendation: The Score to “Thief of Bagdad”Celebrity NFT drops, rankedCelebrity NFT drops, rankedAir fryer hot dog recipe from viral TikTok is an idiotWho Is Nancy Drew, Really?NYT's The Mini crossword answers for October 9Rowan Ricardo Phillips on Steph Curry and the Golden State Warriors.Tinder's Festival Mode lets you find people going to the same showsHow to Be Perfect: An Illustrated Poem by Ron PadgettHow to get the AI '90s yearbook photos all over TikTokNotes on John Carpenter’s “The Thing”Hisense 50Why John Updike Loved ComicsA Letter from Our Paris Editor, Antonin BaudryYour Chrome tabs are a mess — and Google has a plan to fix themHisense 50TikTok can't stop duetting this woman's fallNYT's The Mini crossword answers for October 8Want to Keep People Away? Don’t Insult Them; Confuse Them.Best Prime Day AirPods deal: $40 off Apple AirPods (2nd Gen) Queen celebrates historic jubilee in photo dripping with jewels Nigel Farage gets pelted with an egg in spectacular direct hit This new feature will change your YouTube life Someone stole Tom Brady's Super Bowl Jersey last night China's largest internet company wants to give free internet to Indians Julian Edelman's clutch, jaw Fans relentlessly booed NFL commissioner Roger Goodell after the Super Bowl This DIY triple You can finally have a Cheeto that looks like Harambe ... for $99,999 We're so tired of dating apps but we just can't quit them Hilarious photo series shows the alarmingly normal lives of immigrants Apple's fight with big banks is getting even nastier, and it was already nasty NBA star J.R. Smith shares moving photo after baby daughter's preterm birth J.K. Rowling and Ricky Gervais join forces to shut down Donald Trump Women's March organizers plan a 'day without women' Airbnb Super Bowl ad takes a dig at Trump with a beautiful message Piaggio Fast Forward unveils Gita, an autonomous cargo robot Google Home Super Bowl ad caused some Google Homes to go bonkers Sweet short film about a couple is actually a hearing test in disguise At New York Fashion Week, supporting Planned Parenthood will be in style
1.9118s , 10131.6484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch The Silencing Online】,Miracle Information Network