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The Home Office says the technology helps locate suspects but civil liberties groups warn of heightened surveillance.
"It can make mistakes, and the whole point of live facial recognition is that it's not a decision-maker." Ms Lowe said ...
The government will equip seven police forces in England with new live facial recognition (LFR) vans in a bid to trace ...
Live facial recognition cameras will be rolled out in new areas across England as part of a crime crackdown. A fleet of vans ...
The Home Office has announced 10 new Live Facial Recognition vans will be distributed across seven forces, allowing officers ...
The Government's announcement of 10 new Live Facial Recognition vans marks a significant escalation in mass surveillance ...
Critics issue warning over nationwide expansion of ‘intrusive’ technology which ‘turns every passerby into a walking barcode’ ...
The operation of the new facial recognition vans is bound by strict rules, and that they will only be used when there is ...
Ten live facial recognition vans will be deployed - but human rights groups argue the tech is "dangerous and discriminatory".
The UK government is deploying more Live Facial Recognition (LFR) vans across the country to locate suspects of serious ...
Sussex Police announced yesterday that it will deploy live facial recognition technology as part of a nationwide rollout ...
The Police and Crime Commissioner has said that new facial recognition vans pose “no threat to civil liberties” as the Home Office rolls the technology out across Bedfordshire.