Ministers to overhaul police rules on facial recognition technology | Politics | News


Police officers will be given new rules on when live facial recognition technology can be used to snare criminals, a minister has revealed.

Policing minister Sarah Jones said the Home Office will launch a consultation later this year on how the cameras are used amid privacy, accuracy and intrusion fears.

Ms Jones admitted โ€œthere isnโ€™t really much of a structure around what itโ€™s used forโ€.

But she defended the technology, insisting it has been โ€œvery successful in catching very serious criminals.โ€

The cameras give officers intelligence by matching their faces with records held on the Police National Computer.

The Labour minister revealed at a fringe event at Labourโ€™s party conference: โ€œWe need to put some parameters around what we can use facial recognition for.

โ€œThere has been some advice on how we use it. But we need to go further to make sure itโ€™s clear when it should be used and when it shouldnโ€™t be used, to put some structure around it.

โ€œBecause there isnโ€™t really much of a structure around what itโ€™s used for at the moment.

โ€œWe need to look at whether thatโ€™s enough and whether we need to do more.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to consult on what that should look like, so we can assure the public that itโ€™s being used in the right way.โ€

Defending facial recognition technology, Ms Jones said it had been โ€œvery successful in catching very serious criminalsโ€.

Ms Jones went on: โ€œWe just need to make sure it’s clear what it’s going to be used for going forward.

โ€œIf we are going to use it more, if we do want to roll it out across the country, what are the parameters?

โ€œLetโ€™s make sure people understand that it’s a conversation we need to have, because people have raised it as an issue, both parliamentarians and the public, and they want to understand how this is going to be used.โ€

Rab Donnelly, General Secretary of the USDAW union, urged ministers and police forces to roll it more widely.

He said: โ€œWeโ€™re already trying it in Sainsburyโ€™s in three workplaces, and we need to make sure it is actually rolled out.

โ€œGoing forward, this is going to be very advantageous.โ€

The UKโ€™s second largest supermarket chain, Sainsburyโ€™s, has started an eight-week trial before potentially rolling out the technology nationwide.

Sainsburyโ€™s has said the technology is part of its efforts to identify shoplifters and combat record levels of retail crime, including violence against staff.

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