Facial Recognition Tech Used To Hunt Migrants Was Deployed Without Required Privacy Paperwork
In the grand scheme of things — the wanton cruelty, the routine violations of rights, the actual fucking murders — this may only seem like a blip on the mass deportation continuum. But this report from Dell Cameron for Wired is still important. It not only explains why federal officers are approaching people with cellphones drawn nearly as often as they’re approaching them with guns drawn, but also shows the administration is yet again pretending it’s a law unto itself.
On Wednesday, the Department of Homeland Security published new details about Mobile Fortify, the face recognition app that federal immigration agents use to identify people in the field, undocumented immigrants and US citizens alike. The details, including the company behind the app, were published as part of DHS’s 2025 AI Use Case Inventory, which federal agencies are required to release periodically.
The inventory includes two entries for Mobile Fortify—one for Customs and Border Protection (CBP), another for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)—and says the app is in the “deployment” stage for both. CBP says that Mobile Fortify became “operational” at the beginning of May last year, while ICE got access to it on May 20, 2025. That date is about a month before 404 Media first reported on the app’s existence.
A lot was going on last May, in terms of anti-migrant efforts and the casual refusal to recognize long-standing constitutional rights. That was the same month immigration officers were told they could enter people’s homes while only carrying self-issued “administrative warrants,” which definitely aren’t the same thing as the judicial warrants the government actually needs to enter areas provided the utmost in Fourth Amendment protection.
The app federal officers are using is made by NEC, a tech company that’s been around since long before ICE and CBP become the mobile atrocities they are. Prior to this revelation, NEC had only been associated with developing biometric software with an eye on crafting something that could be swiftly deployed and just as quickly scaled to meet the government’s needs. This particular app was never made public prior to this.
ICE claims it’s not a direct customer. It’s only a beneficiary of the CBP’s existing contract with NEC. That’s a meaningless distinction when multiple federal agencies have been co-opted into the administration’s bigoted push to rid the nation of brown people.
As is always the case (and this precedes Trump 2.0), CBP and ICE are rolling out tech far ahead of the privacy impact paperwork that’s supposed to filed before anything goes live.
While CBP says there are “sufficient monitoring protocols” in place for the app, ICE says that the development of monitoring protocols is in progress, and that it will identify potential impacts during an AI impact assessment. According to guidance from the Office of Management and Budget, which was issued before the inventory says the app was deployed for either CBP or ICE, agencies are supposed to complete an AI impact assessment before deploying any high-impact use case. Both CBP and ICE say the app is “high-impact” and “deployed.”
This is standard operating procedure for the federal government. The FBI and DEA were deploying surveillance tech well ahead of Privacy Impact Assessments (PIAs) as far back as [oh wow] 2014, while the nation was still being run by someone who generally appeared to be a competent statesman. That nothing has changed since makes it clear this problem is endemic.
But things are a bit worse now that Trump is running an administration stocked with fully-cooked MAGA acolytes. In the past, our rights might have received a bit of lip service and the occasional congressional hearing about the lack of required Privacy Impact Assessments.
None of that will be happening now. No one in the DHS is even going to bother to apply pressure to those charged with crafting these assessments. And no one will threaten (much less terminate) the tech deployment until these assessments have been completed. I would fully expect this second Trump term to come and go without the delivery of legally-required paperwork, especially since oversight of these agencies will be completely nonexistent as long as the GOP holds a congressional majority.
We lose. The freshly stocked swamp wins. And while it’s normal to expect the federal government to bristle at the suggestion of oversight, it’s entirely abnormal to allow an administration that embraces white Christian nationalism to act as though the only holy text any Trump appointee subscribes to was handed down by Aleister Crowley: Do what thou wilt. That is the whole of the law.



oh my someone is worried that my caustic dragging of an actually fascist administration isn't "fair" enough. Newsmax will let you watch for free. Get on it, M803.
'wrong term' lol gtfo with your personal bitchassness, ac
if an hmmv can't function as an emergency bathroom, why are we even buying them
Waging war against fellow Americans is something cops want to do. US military members may be just as racist, but they seem to prefer limiting their atrocities to nations other than ours.
I didn't make myself clear in that sentence. There have been zero raids of South Dakota businesses during the 2nd Trump administration.
I'm not trying to minimize what Mastodon does. I went there first when Twitter turned even more shitty than it already was. But there's a difference: Some people will invite some good friends over and play Avalon Hill war sim games for hours on end, providing everyone involved with a deep and necessarily complicated reimagining of world wars. Millions of others just want to boot up Call of Duty and play some multi-player without being hammered by racist and homophobic comments. The entity that solves the second problem first is going to be the industry leader, not necessarily because it offer more control, but because it offers enough control (without the added learning curve) to satisfy the needs of people who want things to work the way they expect them to, rather than people who think spending time being the moderator in "moderation at scale is impossible" is their idea of a good time.
You're right. It is possible to do that there as well. The difference is (and I'm speaking from personal experience) that using Bluesky is like using Twitter but without all the sewage, but Mastodon (for all its fediverse power) is a social media service for people who enjoy the setting up their own email servers.
My apologies. You're right and I'm wrong. I'm not aware of any instances of these laws being enforced in this way, but it's true: at least two states have added this to their hate crime statutes. According to the DOJ, five states have laws like this on the books, but it only appears to be these two states that have added sentence enhancements for attacks based on political alignment. On the other hand, the people petitioning their Congressional reps aren't asking for their political views to be protected under hate crime statutes, they're asking for "Cybertruck owner" to be added to these laws. Of course, it's about politics. But the owners of these cars will need to be honest about why they've purchased them if they hope to be protected under existing law because no one -- not even in this insane political environment -- could possibly hope to pass a bill that adds owners of a single model of vehicle (owners of other Tesla models aren't complaining) to the list of people with protected status under hate crime laws.
a crime "in some areas." Please point out where on a map of the United States -- the place where this is actually happening. Even if you're right (and you're not), point out anywhere in the world where owning a certain vehicle grants you extra protection from people who don't like your vehicle.
Well, let's get some gun control going first.
Wasn't this after Trump supporters started posting threats on social media about "hunting FEMA?" And no one expects FEMA to act as first responders, so if it "seems similar," it's only because you think you're actually making some kind of point here.
Trust me, I took great pleasure in reporting this -- that being Rudy's 2nd "DO NOT PRACTICE LAW. DO NOT PASS GO" ruling. My pleasure is only tempered by the fact relayed by the second half of that sentence. That's not a typo. That's just my spin on a common phrase.
Ask your SAIC, I guess.
I'm willing to bet part of this is just a bunch of straight men trying to find some way to deny their own sexual attraction to trans women. This study, one that openly admits it's working with largely anecdotal evidence, studied hundreds of social media posts on the topic and found that plenty of men admit attraction to trans women but then backstop their admissions with misogyny. That seems about par for the course here: a bunch of legislators who view themselves as religious leaders are attempting to legislate their own shame into non-existence. Kill all porn and they'll finally be able to deny their own desires because they'll no longer have access to the stuff that turns them on the most.
Depending on your particular preference in noise-to-blues ratio, you'll be pleased/displeased to know the Jesus and Mary Chain covered this track around the same time they declared Bo Diddley to be Jesus.
I have failed you all.