Topic: Sarah Jones
Facial recognition technology raises significant concerns regarding privacy and civil liberties, as governments increasingly deploy it for surveillance purposes. The expansion of such technology, particularly in public sectors, poses risks of misidentification and abuse, undermining individual rights. The legal challenges surrounding its use highlight the urgent need for robust protections against mass surveillance and the erosion of free expression.
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“Nothing to Fear” Is Back: The UK High Court Clears Way for Police Facial Recognition
The policy that turns every Oxford Street shopper into a biometric template just got the judicial nod its architects were…
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British Transport Police Launch Facial Recognition Trials in London Stations
Britain’s railways are turning into laboratories for algorithmic policing, where every commuter’s face becomes just another line of data in…
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UK Expands Live Facial Recognition as First Legal Challenge Targets Met Police Misidentification
Facial recognition quietly scales nationwide as police double down on a tool still lacking clear legal ground.



