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Met to expand use of live facial recognition into central London by Christmas
The Met plan to deploy static cameras in the West End and Soho, which have some of the highest crime rates in the capital. Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty Images View image in fullscreen The Met plan to deploy static cameras in the West End and Soho, which have some of the highest crime rates in the capital. Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty Images Met to expand use of live facial recognition into central London by Christmas Technology to be used in six more areas next year as critics say tens of thousands of people will be forced into ‘digital police lineup’ The Metropolitan police is to expand its use of live facial recognition (LFR) technology, first into London’s West End by Christmas and then into a further six areas next year. The new cameras will be fixed, and could be attached to street furniture such as lamp-posts. Critics said the new plans mean tens of thousands of people will be forced into a “digital police lineup”. LFR scans the faces of those people passing its camera’s lens, and then compares it with a watchlist of wanted suspects. The Met has been trialling the technology and using vans deployed for a short time in some areas. It also used LFR via a static camera in Croydon, south London as an experiment, which Britain’s biggest force says was a success. Later this year new static cameras will be deployed in London’s West End and Soho, which have some of the highest crime rates in the British capital. The Met says the cameras will move location as officers spot crime trends. In 2027 it plans to place static LFR cameras in six further areas, and hopes local councils will contribute to the cost. The Met insists any decision to arrest following an alert on its LFR system is made by a human being. Live facial recognition is controversial because it predominantly surveils the faces of the innocent when they walk past the system’s cameras. Furthermore the algorithm used to power it can discriminate against black people. Police and government, which back its expanded use, say the civil right issues are minimal, if they exist at all. The Met has turned down the sensitivity of its algorithm and says that nearly eliminates the bias. Ministers and police believe LFR’s crime fighting potential is huge, also freeing up officer time at a time of financial strain. Met commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said: “Facial recognition is one of the most revolutionary technology advances in policing in recent years. Public confidence in this is clear – around 80% of Londoners support its use. That backing reflects a simple truth: it works.” Figures from the use of static cameras in Croydon are used by the Met to show how effective LFR is. The force says 173 arrests were made during a six-month pilot, with cameras placed at both ends of Croydon high street. The force says only one person was wrongly identified by LFR out of 470,000 faces scanned, and was allowed to go and was not arrested. Rowley said: “We want to build on our success by introducing this capability to