Summary

  • Detroit woman wrongly arrested for carjacking and robbery due to facial recognition technology error.
  • Porsche Woodruff, 8 months pregnant, mistakenly identified as culprit based on outdated 2015 mug shot.
  • Surveillance footage did not match the identification, victim wrongly identified Woodruff from lineup based on the 2015 outdated photo.
  • Woodruff arrested, detained for 11 hours, charges later dismissed; she files lawsuit against Detroit.
  • Facial recognition technology’s flaws in identifying women and people with dark skin highlighted.
  • Several US cities banned facial recognition; debate continues due to lobbying and crime concerns.
  • Law enforcement prioritized technology’s output over visual evidence, raising questions about its integration.
  • ACLU Michigan involved; outcome of lawsuit uncertain, impact on law enforcement’s tech use in question.
  • ConsciousCode@beehaw.org
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    11 months ago

    I’m not sure it should be illegal, since it can be legitimately useful, but maybe something like “inconclusive evidence that isn’t enough to grant a warrant”. That way, you can get a list of potential suspects but you don’t end up violating rights by issuing undue warrants.