German MEP shocked by EU plans to tyranny of AI

Source: (https://bit.ly/3EhKyJO)
"We need to prevent a China-style dystopian future of biometric
mass surveillance in Europe!" 
German Member of the European Parliament, Patrick Breyer, has
warned that a leaked artificial intelligence (AI) regulation proposal
from the European Union (EU) Council Presidency would "open
the door for biometric mass surveillance in public spaces on a broad
scale."
The leaked regulation proposal details how the EU Council Presidency
plans to introduce "harmonised rules on artificial intelligence" as it
implements the Artificial Intelligence Act.
It proposes allowing law enforcement to use AI systems for
"real-timeĀ…remote biometric identification" of people in public
spaces when involved in "the search for potential victims of crime,
including missing children," "certain threats to the life or physical
safety of natural persons or of a terrorist attack," and "the
detection, localisation, identification or prosecution of"
perpetrators or suspects of certain crimes that are punishable in the
Member State with a custodial sentence or detention order for
a maximum period of at least three years.
The leaked regulation proposal's definition of "biometric data"
extends far beyond facial recognition data and includes any "personal
data resulting from specific technical processing relating to the
physical, physiological or behavioural characteristics of a natural
person, which allow or confirm the unique identification of that
natural person." The document also specifies that "facial images"
and "dactyloscopic data" (fingerprint and palm print data) qualify
as biometric data.
In most circumstances, the rules in this leaked proposal would
require law enforcement to gain "prior authorisation" from a judicial
authority or an independent administrative authority in their Member
State and this prior authorization would be issued in accordance with
the rules of national law. Law enforcement would also be subject to
"appropriate limits in time and space" when deploying real-time
remote biometric recognition technology and be required to comply
with "necessary and proportionate safeguards and conditions."
However, if law enforcement decides that there's "a duly justified
situation of urgency," the rules in this proposal give them
permission to use real-time remote biometric recognition technology
without this prior authorization.
The leaked proposal claims that these proposed rules only allow law
enforcement to use real-time mass biometric surveillance technology
in "narrowly defined situations." But since this technology would be
deployed in a public setting, any deployment would result in the mass
scanning and identification of the faces of mostly innocent people
in the pursuit of a "potential" victim of a crime or a suspect who may
not have been charged.
"This proposal would justify the permanent and ubiquitous
deployment of face surveillance," Breyer wrote. "We need to prevent
a China-style dystopian future of biometric mass surveillance in
Europe! This technology is being abused by authoritarian countries
such as Russia or Iran, is this the direction our governments want
to take us?"
Breyer added: "We must stand up against biometric mass surveillance
in our public spaces because these technologies wrongfully report
large numbers of innocent citizens, systematically discriminate
against under-represented groups and have a chilling effect on a free
and diverse society. Legislation allowing for indiscriminate mass
surveillance has consistently been annulled by the courts due
to their incompatibility with fundamental rights. The European
Parliament will need to fight to have this ban implemented in the AI
Act!"
Breyer also noted that most Europeans oppose the use of biometric
mass surveillance in public spaces and that over 200 civil society
organizations, activists, tech specialists, and other experts want
a global ban on "biometric recognition technologies that enable mass
and discriminatory surveillance.
Additionally, Breyer remarked that the European Data Protection Board
and European Data Protection Supervisor have called for a"general ban
on any use of AI for an automated recognition of human features in
publicly accessible spaces" and that the United Nations (UN) Human
Rights Office has spoke out against the use of biometric recognition
technologies in public spaces.