Yes to the βICE Out of Our Faces Actβ
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) have descended into utter lawlessness, most recently in Minnesota. The violence is shocking. So are the intrusions on digital rights and civil liberties. For example, immigration agents are routinely scanning faces of people they suspect of unlawful presence in the country β 100,000 times, according to the Wall Street Journal. The technology has already misidentified at least one person, according to 404 Media.
Face recognition technology is so dangerous that government should not use it at allβleast of all these out-of-control immigration agencies.
To combat these abuses, EFF is proud to support the βICE Out of Our Faces Act.β This new federal bill would ban ICE and CBP agents, and some local police working with them, from acquiring or using biometric surveillance systems, including face recognition technology, or information derived from such systems by another entity. This bill would be enforceable, among other ways, by a strong private right of action.
The billβs lead author is Senator Ed Markey. We thank him for his longstanding leadership on this issue, including introducing similar legislation that would ban all federal law enforcement agencies, and some federally-funded state agencies, from using biometric surveillance systems (a bill that EFF also supported). The new βICE Out of My Face Actβ is also sponsored by Senator Merkley, Senator Wyden, and Representative Jayapal.
As EFF explains in the new billβs announcement:
Itβs past time for the federal government to end itsΒ use of thisΒ abusive surveillance technology. A great place to start is itsΒ use for immigration enforcement, given ICE and CBPβs utter disdain for the law.Β Face surveillance in the hands of the government is a fundamentally harmful technology, even under strict regulations or if the technology was 100% accurate. We thank the authors of this bill for their leadership in taking steps to end thisΒ use of this dangerous and invasive technology.
You can read the bill here, and the billβs announcement here.

