Facial recognition can speed you through airport security, but there's a cost
A growing Customs and BorderProtection program pits convenience and security against privacy.
A station manager for Swedish airline SAS ushersa boarding passenger through the process as officials at Washington DullesAirport.
In the
not too distant future, you could walk into the international terminal of
almost any US airport and board a plane without showing anyone your
passport.
At the
check-in counter, you'd pose in front of a camera that scans your face and sends your image
to a remote system that matches it to a stored copy of your passport photo.
You'd have your photo taken again at the security line, and again at the gate.
If everything still matched up, you'd be on board, quietly warring with your
seat mate over the armrest.
Part of that automated
future has already rolled out. The US Customs and Border Protection program,
called Biometric Exit, includes a face-matching system and is used at departure
gates in 17 airports in the US.
And that's just the start.
The agency plans to have the system scan 97 percent of all outbound
international travelers by 2021. Airlines and the Transportation Security
Agency also are testing facial recognition cameras
throughout airports, meaning you might someday be able to travel without
interacting with another human being at all.
"US Customs and
Border Protection is changing the face of travel with its cloud-based facial
biometric matching service," the agency says in a pamphlet explaining the technology.
"This matching service is envisioned to replace the need to manually check
paper travel documents by providing an automated identity verification process
everywhere a traveler shows their travel document across every step in the
travel continuum."
There may be no more
dramatic example of the tension between convenience and privacy inherent
in facial recognition than the prospect of giving up your identity to clear
through security faster. That benefit, after all, comes at a cost. Academic
research has shown that facial recognition algorithms have error rates that
vary depending on a person's race or gender, meaning some groups could face
extra screening more often than others. The technology can be used without your
knowledge. And the unalterable data that facial recognition systems collect --
an image of your face -- raises concerns that your movements can be tracked
over the course of your life if the records are kept indefinitely.
CBP says facial
recognition technology has the potential to make travel both more convenient
and more secure because it creates a digital template that's unique to you.
Machines are getting faster at matching faces and, CBP says, do a better job
than humans do. What's more, the program follows facial recognition efforts
rolling out in other countries, including Australia.
But critics say CBP has
already pushed -- and possibly broken -- the boundaries of the US law. One
specific complaint: The technology has debuted in airports without being
subject to a public comment period.
The potential for multiple
government agencies to track you using facial recognition is real, says Jeramie
Scott, senior counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center. In recently
released documents his organization obtained, CBP noted that other government
agencies with an interest in the photos of foreign nationals gathered at
airports are Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the US Coast Guard.
"When you create the
infrastructure for widespread use of facial recognition, people will find
additional ways to use it," Scott said.
CBP says the program isn't
intended for surveillance and was implemented in accordance with the law. US
citizens can opt out, and the agency doesn't keep their images long term.
How it
works
The system is designed tobe a snap: The airport or airline you're flying with takes your picture at thegate, sending the encrypted image to CBP's Traveler Verification Service
system, which runs on a cloud server. There, CBP's face-matching algorithm
confirms that the person in the image is the same one that's in your passport
photo.
The system does this by
creating a biometric template based on the passenger's photograph. The template
is a set of measurements of the size and shape of features, like eyes, and the
distance between features, like your nose and upper lip. The system compares
that template to a preloaded gallery of passenger photos, pulled from passports
and other sources.
Airlines including
JetBlue, British Airways and Delta, along with organizations that run airports
in cities like Miami and San Jose, California, have already partnered with CBP
to implement the system. The airlines or airports own the cameras and take
passenger photos. In Atlanta, Delta Air Lines has introduced facialrecognitionchecks throughout its international terminal in
partnership with CBP and TSA.
CBP says it keeps photos
of US citizens in the Traveler Verification Service system for 12 hours, and
photos of noncitizens for 14 days. It also sends photos of noncitizens to the
US Department of Homeland Security IDENT database, which stores information for 75 years on
visitors to the US.
The airlines and airports
aren't allowed to keep copies of the photos and must immediately purge them
from their systems, according to CBP. However, they're allowed to use other
photos they take with the same cameras for commercial purposes. That means they
could take a second photo and use it in their own facial recognition system to
target ads to you.
Airlines and airports are
required to tell CBP if they plan to use photos for commercial purposes. So
far, none has. JetBlue and Delta said separately that they don't have plans to
use facial recognition for commercial purposes, and added that their cameras
capture images only when a passenger stands in front of the camera and actively
triggers the scan. A spokeswoman for Mineta San Jose Airport says it only
facilitates the CBP program and doesn't have access to the photos.
Legal
authority
The program has raised
questions about its legality. The American Civil Liberties Union, the
Electronic Privacy Information Center, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and
other organizations say there's no law that allows CBP to collect biometric
information on US citizens, regardless of how long it's stored. What's more,
they say, the agency's choice to use facial recognition, rather than biometrics
like fingerprints, is unnecessarily invasive.
CBP says a number of laws
allow it to gather biometric information. For example, the law that established
the Department of Homeland Security, CBP's parent agency, gives it the
authority to use technology to get all the data it needs for the biometricentry and exit program.
Congress first ordered the
collection of biometric data from foreign nationals entering and exiting the
country in 1996. It ordered the creation of a biometric entry-exit program in
2002 and authorized funds for it in
2016. However, privacy law experts point out that while some of the laws CBP
cites apply specifically to noncitizens, none of them explicitly references
situations involving citizens.
"US citizens have
been conspicuously absent from the statutory text of every law under this
program for the last 14 years," according to a 2017 report by the Georgetown Law Center on Privacy &Technology.
If a US citizen opts out
of the Biometric Exit program, the passenger can have his or her travel
documents and passport checked by an airline employee, CBP says. If something
doesn't check out, the airline can ask a CBP officer for assistance.
A passenger steps up to a new biometric facial
recognition scanner at Washington Dulles Airport.
Agencies like CBP
typically go through a rule-making process to explain how new programs
implement the underlying law and get feedback from the public. That hasn't
happened with the Biometric Exit program.
In a proposed rule, CBP wants
to require US citizens to submit to facial recognition both at boarding and
re-entry to the US.
Simply asking people
whether they're citizens before requiring them to submit to facial recognition
would lead to people lying, CBP says. The agency says that biometric facial
recognition is more accurate than humans checking passport photos against a
person's face, so it's better at catching people traveling fraudulently with US
passports. The system caught three imposters at Washington Dulles Airport in a
period of 40 days, according to CBP.
Error
rates
Academic studies have
shown that some facial recognition algorithms are less accurate for some groups
of people depending on their skin color and gender. One study found that
commercial facial recognition products from companies like Amazon and Microsoft
had higher error rates for black women. Others were more likely to give false
negatives to white men, according to research from the National Institute of Standardsand Technology.
A false negative -- the
algorithm incorrectly says your face doesn't match your photo -- has the
potential to make travel more inconvenient for legitimate passengers. It would
be unfair for some groups of people to face additional screening more often
than others, advocates say.
"We're talking about
something that discriminates based off of what you look like," said ManaAzarmi, policy council at the Center for Democracy and Technology.
Without oversight, it
would be hard to know whether the system has higher error rates for some groups
of people. CBP is working with NIST and the DHS Science and Technology
Directorate to monitor problems, the agency says. CBP hasn't revealed its false
negative or other error rates, or how they affect different groups. CBP told
Buzzfeed that it confirms 98.6 percent of passengers who go through the
Biometric Exit system.
Face
forward
Even if CBP had full legal
authority to collect biometric information from all passengers before they
leave the country, privacy advocates think facial recognition isn't the right
biometric to collect.
That's because facial
recognition can be conducted without targets realizing it. The technology
doesn't require physical contact, as fingerprints do, and it's progressing so
that low-quality photos taken from the side are sufficient to identify someone.
Once people realize that facial recognition is unavoidable at airports, they
may become discouraged from traveling and taking part in political activity,
like the 2017 protests in US airports against travel bans, advocates say.
In a November report on the program,CBP said the system is preferable because passengers experience it as being
less invasive than fingerprints.
But perception isn't what
matters, said Neema Singh Guliani, a senior legislative counsel at the ACLU.
"These are programs
that have such an extreme effect on people's rights," she said, "and
a process that's not transparent."


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