Singapore police testing out public surveillance robot raises privacy concerns
Date:
Fri, 10 Sep 2021 02:18:47 +0000
Description:
Singapore authorities are testing out an AI-powered robot that will monitor high-traffic public spaces for law breakers.
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Authorities in Singapore are testing out their latest AI-powered tool to improve public safety while raising some serious privacy concerns in the process.
A pair of Xaviers, wheeled, AI-powered robots with 360-degree cameras, will deploy in the highly foot-trafficked Toa Payoh Central to monitor the area
for "undesireable social behavior" like smoking and hanging out in groups larger than five people to help prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus, Business Insider reports.
"The deployment of ground robots will help to augment our surveillance and enforcement resources," said Lily Ling, Singapore Food Agency's director of East Regional Office, said in a statement . "For instance, the surveillance
of illegal hawkers can be manpower intensive as officers need to be deployed at various areas across the island. The adoption of robotics technology can
be used to enhance such operations, and reduce the need for our officers to
do physical patrols."
The use of AI and robotics in law enforcement is nothing new, as companies like Amazon have partnered with police to use its facial recognition software Rekognition to identify criminal suspects or "persons of interest", but it's no less disconcerting for many privacy advocates who worry about the data collection capabilities of government agencies who may have few if any restraint on their use. Analysis: Are snitch bots inevitable? That's up to us
As Gizmodo points out, Singapore has a notoriously strict legal culture so something like a "snitch bot" patrolling public spaces might not be too out
of place, but law enforcement in the US have tried to deploy such
technologies as well, most recently in New York City when the NYPD debuted
its own version of Boston Dynamics "Spot" robot.
The swift and ferocious public outcry about a police robot patrolling predominantly poor neighborhoods led to the NYPD cancelling its contract with Boston Dynamics. But issues around these technologies persist as tech companies continue to partner with law enforcement and other government agencies to bring new AI-powered technologies to domains where civil
liberties concerns aren't just valid but have often been violated by these same government authorities.
There's nothing we can do about that technology itself, which already exists, but how it is used will ultimately be up to how much we care to make it an issue. Stay up to date on all the latest tech news with the TechRadar newsletter
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Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/news/singapore-police-testing-out-public-surveillanc e-robot-raises-privacy-concerns/
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