UK police fails ethical tests with "unlawful" facial recognition deployments

A male police officer watches a number of CCTV feeds on a computer monitor

A team of researchers from the University of Cambridge have called for UK police to be banned from using facial recognition in public spaces, and claimed that police deployment of the tech to date has not met “minimum ethical and legal standards”.

Researchers analysed three instances of facial recognition technology (FRT) used by UK police - two from South Wales Police and one from the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) - and found that in every case FRT could infringe upon human rights, falling short of ethical and legal standards.

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A group from the Minderoo Centre for Technology and Democracy created an audit tool to weigh the examples against a number of legal standards, as well as measurements of technical reliability, human decision-making and expertise.

Legal standards included the Data Protection Act (DPA) 2018, Human Rights Act 1998, and Equality Act 2010.

In response, the authors of the study have recommended that others apply its audit to other instances of police FRT. This could then build evidence to inform potential litigation efforts and lend its support to the prevention of police FRT use in public spaces.

“There is a lack of robust redress mechanisms for individuals and communities harmed by police deployments of the technology,” said the lead author Evani Radiya-Dixit, who is a visiting fellow at Cambridge’s Minderoo Centre.

“To protect human rights and improve accountability in how technology is used, we must ask what values we want to embed in technology.”

The report also concluded that UK police have consistently refrained from consulting the public, and marginalised communities in particular about the use of FRT, nor published transparent data on the use of FRT to allow for independent scrutiny.

Use of live facial recognition (LFR) by the MPS between August 2016 and February 2019, one of the three case studies assessed by the authors, was highlighted as a particular example of this lack of transparency.

"While MPS published some demographic data in their results, they did not record the demographic breakdown for engagements, stop and searches, arrests, and other outcomes resulting from the use of LFR,” read the report.

“This makes it hard to evaluate whether LFR perpetuates racial profiling. There was also no published evaluation of racial or gender bias in the technology. MPS conducted an internal evaluation but did not disclose the results. This lack of transparency makes it difficult for outside stakeholders to assess the comprehensiveness of the evaluation."

The report’s authors cited research that has shown FRT to perform noticeably worse on marginalised groups. They stated that under the Public Sector Equality Duty of the Equality Act 2010, police are required to acknowledge that live facial recognition carries bias against people of colour, women, and people with disabilities.

"We would have welcomed the opportunity to have spoken to the researchers of this report and to share with them our latest data, legal framework and the arrests made as a result of live facial recognition operations," an MPS spokesperson told IT Pro.

"Between August 2016 and February 2019, we trialled LFR in different situations, to allow us to learn and progress / develop its use before launching it in January 2020, with publicly available documents covering legal, data and equality issues on our website.

"We continue to review and assess our use of this important tool, including its demographic performance."

Proportionality was also raised as an issue, with South Wales Police found to have retained custody images on a facial recognition watchlist without clear limits on the seriousness of the offences of those included.

The authors argued that this was used disproportionately in combination with operator-initiated facial recognition (typically carried out on a mobile phone) and that the watchlist also included unlawfully-retained images of innocent individuals who were arrested but never convicted.

South Wales Police told IT Pro that a Court of Appeal judgement in 2020 highlighted some areas that needed improvement, and the force has begun trialling experimental deployments to test the proposed mitigations. The results of these trials will be known later this year, a spokesperson said.

“The legal challenge to our use of this ground-breaking technology through the courts has enabled us to ensure that its use is responsible, proportionate and fair,” said assistant chief constable Mark Travis.

“The whole aim of using facial recognition technology is to keep the public safe and assist us in identifying serious offenders in order to protect our communities from individuals who pose significant risks.

“I believe the public will continue to support our use of all the available methods and technology to keep them safe, providing what we do is legitimate and proportionate.”

Police use of facial recognition has become a commonly raised issue among rights campaigners, with the use of live facial recognition (LFR) particularly controversial in its deployment.

The Ada Lovelace institute published a report in June, which called for new regulations on biometric data processing in the public and private sector, and recommended the creation of an independent Biometrics Ethics Board to whom public bodies would have to justify their use of biometrics technology.

Private companies have also prompted complaints from within government for their use of facial recognition tech. In July, a cross-party group of MPs signed a letter calling for a ban on two prominent Chinese CCTV firms’ use of facial recognition, stating that the widespread use of their equipment in public buildings constituted a national security risk.

This article was updated to include comments from the Metropolitan Police Service and South Wales Police.

Rory Bathgate
Features and Multimedia Editor

Rory Bathgate is Features and Multimedia Editor at ITPro, overseeing all in-depth content and case studies. He can also be found co-hosting the ITPro Podcast with Jane McCallion, swapping a keyboard for a microphone to discuss the latest learnings with thought leaders from across the tech sector.

In his free time, Rory enjoys photography, video editing, and good science fiction. After graduating from the University of Kent with a BA in English and American Literature, Rory undertook an MA in Eighteenth-Century Studies at King’s College London. He joined ITPro in 2022 as a graduate, following four years in student journalism. You can contact Rory at rory.bathgate@futurenet.com or on LinkedIn.