The Terms of servicecompany leading the charge on protecting civil rights from technological abuse is... Microsoft?!
Microsoft President Brad Smith delivered some surprisingly principled news about his company while speaking at Stanford University on Tuesday. Recently, Smith said that Microsoft declined to sell its facial recognition technology to both a California law enforcement agency and an unnamed capital city because of human rights concerns, according to Reuters.
SEE ALSO: Your social media photos could be training facial recognition AI without your consentThat's in contrast to Amazon, which defends its contracts with law enforcement agencies that use its Rekognition software, and has sought to discredit an ACLU study that showed racial bias in Rekognition. The ACLU study and others have found that facial recognition AI is less accurate at identifying women and minorities than white men. Because of this bias, Smith said that use by law enforcement could disproportionately harm these groups.
"Anytime they pulled anyone over, they wanted to run a face scan," Smith said. "We said this technology is not your answer."
"Anytime they pulled anyone over, they wanted to run a face scan. We said this technology is not your answer."
That is, the potential for misidentifying someone at a simple traffic stop as a potential suspect was too great for Microsoft to sell the agency the technology. Smith also said that it denied the capital city in the unnamed country the technology because the blanket surveillance it wanted to implement would impede freedom of assembly.
However, Microsoft has sold the technology to a U.S. prison. Smith said that the limited scope of use would assuage these concerns, and had the potential to improve safety inside the prison.
Microsoft faced protests from employees over a contract with the U.S. military to develop AR HoloLens technology, specifically for "increased lethality." CEO Satya Nadella rebuffed their push to halt the contract, arguing that it was the company's duty to support the military.
Google and Amazon also faced employee protests (over a censored Chinese search engine and facial recognition tech, respectively), and both have dismissed them.
As an establishment tech company without any sort of "Don't Be Evil" legacy, Microsoft's facial recognition move might come as a surprise. Smith said that the company did not want to partake in a "race to the bottom," where developing the best facial recognition AI means enabling blanket surveillance to amass biometric data. Speaking with Smith, the United Nations high commissioner for human rights, Michelle Bachelet, urged other tech companies to follow suit.
“Please embody the human rights approach when you are developing technology,” Bachelet said.
It's depressing that denying government agencies use of a technology because it might infringe on civil rights is the (low) bar for praise in Silicon Valley. Still, Microsoft's stance on this issue might cause others to follow suit. Papa Gates would be proud.
Topics Artificial Intelligence Facial Recognition Microsoft Social Good
'Dune: Part Two: What does Paul tell Baron Harkonnen?Elon Musk's X has already backed off its new antiBest portable speaker deals: Shop Bose and Tribit speaker dealsWordle today: The answer and hints for March 4Best robot vacuum deals: Shop iRobot Roomba deals at AmazonFire ants survive Houston flooding by creating terrifying rafts made of their bodiesWordle today: The answer and hints for March 2'Dune: Part Two' ending explained: What comes next for Paul and Chani?Elon Musk shared the first photo of SpaceX's snazzy new spacesuitSpaceX sticks yet another rocket landing on a drone ship in the oceanSpaceX sticks yet another rocket landing on a drone ship in the oceanApple launches new 13Discover Samsung Week at Amazon: Get 54% off monitorsState Department science envoy's resignation letter has a hidden clueState Department science envoy's resignation letter has a hidden clueWill Forte sends love to cast and crew of scrapped 'Coyote vs. Acme'Best portable speaker deals: Shop Bose and Tribit speaker deals'Dune: Part Two' ending explained: What comes next for Paul and Chani?Shark vacuum deal: Get 40% off Shark vacuums at AmazonHow to watch 'Wonka' at home — streaming release details, Max deals, and more “The Ecstatic, The Hermetic, and the Strange” 2022's weirdest, wildest internet moments you might have forgotten about A Glossary of Boontling, the Strange Jargon of Boonvile, CA 8 Best Bose Black Friday deals: QuietComfort Earbuds II and more It’s Never a Bad Time to Brush Up on Your Demonology NYT's The Mini crossword answers for November 14 'The White Lotus' Season 2 finale memes take over Twitter Edward Albee Wanted His Unfinished Work to Be Destroyed Kindly Bent to Ease Us: Paintings by Leidy Churchman 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 14, 2023 'Uber Tasks' is like Uber Eats. But you'll get completed chores instead of food. 10 social media trends that changed the internet in 2022 How to Break the Ten Commandments (Literally) Ralph Ellison and Joseph Mitchell: A Friendship Hiding in the Archives Inside the Issue: Behind “No Home Go Home / Go Home No Home” Voyage in the Dark by Brian Cullman The Uncanny Double: An Interview with Megan McDowell The Great Nadar: Mementos from a Famous French Photographer On the Shelf: the Final Edition We’re Called “The Paris Review,” But We’ve Got Nothing for Bastille Day
1.1991s , 8223.8359375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Terms of service】,Charm Information Network