The New York legislature today passed a moratorium banning the use of facial recognition and other forms of biometric identification in schools until 2022. VentureBeat reports: The bill, which has yet to be signed by Governor Andrew Cuomo, appears to be the first in the nation to explicitly regulate the use of the technologies in schools and comes in response to the planned launch of facial recognition by the Lockport City School District. In January, Lockport Schools became one of the only U.S. school districts to adopt facial recognition in all of its K-12 buildings, which serve about 5,000 students. Proponents argued the $1.4 million system could keep students safe by enforcing watchlists and sending alerts when it detected someone dangerous (or otherwise unwanted). But critics said it could be used to surveil students and build a database of sensitive information about people’s faces, which the school district then might struggle to keep secure.

While Lockport Schools’ privacy policy states the watchlist wouldn’t include students and the database would only cover non-students deemed a threat, including sex offenders or those banned by court order, the district’s superintendent ultimately oversaw which individuals were added to the system. And it was reported earlier this month that the school board’s president, John Linderman, couldn’t guarantee that student photos would never be included in the system for disciplinary reasons. “This is especially important as schools across the state begin to acknowledge the experiences of Black and Brown students being policed in schools and funneled into the school-to-prison pipeline,” said Stefanie Coyle, Deputy Director of the Education Policy Center at the New York Civil Liberties Union. “Facial recognition is notoriously inaccurate especially when it comes to identifying women and people of color. For children, whose appearances change rapidly as they grow, biometric technologies’ accuracy is even more questionable. False positives, where the wrong student is identified, can result in traumatic interactions with law enforcement, loss of class time, disciplinary action, and potentially a criminal record.”

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Source:: Slashdot