Oh Look, Some Cop Just Got Busted For Abusing Access To Clearview AI

from the it's-the-thing-everyone-knew-would-happen dept

The inevitable is upon us: a police officer has been caught using Clearview AI for non-law enforcement purposes. That wouldn’t mean anything if the officer had private access to the most ethically dubious player in the facial recognition tech market. But he didn’t. He was using access purchased by his employer, so it wasn’t only a violation of department policy, but a clear, non-law enforcement-related violation of the privacy of those on the other end of these searches.

An officer with the Evansville Police Department has resigned following an investigation of misusing the department’s A.I. technology.

Evansville Police Chief Philip Smith said Tuesday that Officer Michael Dockery, a five-year member of the police department, resigned before the Police Merit Commission could make a final determination for termination.

The fact that Officer Dockery decided to resign rather than be disciplined (further) or fired is equally unsurprising. If you can get out before the hammer falls, you can just go ply your wares at another law enforcement agency since you won’t have anything on your permanent record. (And that’s if the new employer cares to look at your permanent record. Most law enforcement either don’t bother to check incoming officers’ pasts, or just don’t consider causes for concern to be cause for concern.)

The more surprising aspect of this incident was how it was discovered. The chief was performing an audit of the software prior to the PD’s renewal of its contract. And that’s when he came across the improper searches. He suspended Officer Dockery for 21 days, at which point Dockery decided to call it quits.

This is more of the same bullshit we’ve come to expect from cops who have access to other people’s personal information. Officers have been caught running personal searches on drivers license databases and other repositories of personal data collected by government agencies.

Dockery didn’t play by the rules established by his employer. But he was pretty much completely aligned with Clearview’s ethically dubious marketing tactics in which it encouraged potential customers (including law enforcement agencies) to run personal searches utilizing its AI and millions (now more than 30 billion) of images it had scraped from the web.

[I]n a November email to a police lieutenant in Green Bay, Wisconsin, a company representative encouraged a police officer to use the software on himself and his acquaintances.

“Have you tried taking a selfie with Clearview yet?” the email read. “It’s the best way to quickly see the power of Clearview in real time. Try your friends or family. Or a celebrity like Joe Montana or George Clooney.

“Your Clearview account has unlimited searches. So feel free to run wild with your searches,” the email continued.

Maybe this seems like a one-off. I guarantee this isn’t. This is someone who got caught. Plenty of agencies have access to facial recognition tech. The number of agencies that engage in periodic audits is undoubtedly far less than the number of agencies using the tech.

The only thing anomalous about this is that the agency moved quickly to discipline the officer who violated department policy. Once again, I can guarantee lots of other violations have occurred and at least some of those have been discovered. But a discovery followed by immediate (or any!) discipline is an actual unicorn.

There will be more in the future. And as for (at the moment) former officer Michael Dockery, he’d better hope his next employer is a regression to the mean in terms of police accountability if he wants to keep his job.

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Companies: clearview, clearview ai

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Anonymous Coward says:

The chief was performing an audit of the software prior to the PD’s renewal of its contract. And that’s when he came across the improper searches. He suspended Officer Dockery for 21 days, at which point Dockery decided to call it quits.

Wait? He did an audit? like without an external agency breathing down his neck?

AND he moved address (potentially, at the time) problematic behavior, of a fellow officer? And he was not being held at gunpoint at the time?

Should… should we celebrate this behavior? I mean compared to a lot of the fare that comes out here this is exemplary (though I would say in objective terms it is about baseline.) behavior.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Something being forbidden is not the same as it being impossible. Where I live, the law says I may not drive on the left side of the road (a few specific exceptions notwithstanding). However, there is nothing physically stopping me from doing so. Yes, if I’m caught breaking that law and the state is willing to punish me for it, then I’ll pay a price for my violation. However, if I am confident I’ll get away with it, or if I consider the benefits worth the potential punishment, then the law will not stop me or even deter me.

It’s with this in mind that we should view things like department policy with some amount of skepticism. Sure, the abuse mentioned in the article is against the rules, but to what extent does that fact actually deter people from doing it? Punishment–let alone when there’s a reliable way to dodge it–is not the same as prevention.

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