When an indescribable tragedy was inflicted upon Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, we saw the predictable platitudes. We saw well-worn promises of changes that will never come. And we saw growing frustration that so many political leaders are willing to sacrifice children on the altar of the Second Amendment. But we also saw a comparatively newer element of the post-shooting ritual rear its ugly head: the increasingly insistent claims that technology can magically keep our kids safe. It won’t. In the days since the attack, we’ve heard from seemingly every surveillance vendor on the market, each promising that their tech will somehow be the solution to America’s gun-violence problem. Just days before the Uvalde attack, the CEO of the controversial metal detector firm Evolv positioned his firm in the Washington Post as the panopticon panacea, claiming his product would “democratize security.” In response to criticism that his error-plagued metal detector is just as likely to alert officers to laptops as it was guns, Evolv hid behind claims that public scrutiny might endanger the company’s proprietary algorithm. Once again, the tech companies are frantic to ensure the public won’t look behind the curtain. Evolv is far from the only firm trying to profit from tragedy. Clearview AI, which first received global condemnation for taking billions of photos from social media and other websites to create its facial recognition software, announced the same day as the Uvalde shooting that it was working to bring facial recognition to schools. The move came just weeks after the company agreed to stop sales to private companies as part of a settlement with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Tech companies weren’t the only ones claiming that surveillance would be the solution. For feckless politicians unwilling to stand up to gun companies, the magical thinking of surveillance “solutionism” offers an easy out. In his speech last week before the National Rifle Association (NRA)’s annual convention, former President Donald Trump called for “strong exterior fencing, metal detectors, and the use of new technology” in order to prevent more mass shootings. At the same conference, Texas Senator Ted Cruz said schools should simply “buy every metal detector known to man.” But the truth is that none of those measures would work to prevent tragedies like the Uvalde shooting. After all, Robb Elementary itself had taken preventative surveillance measures. The Uvalde school district had doubled security spending in the years leading up to the attack, paying for its own police force, expanded police partnerships, drug- and firearm-sniffing dogs, security vestibules, new fences, and the now-ubiquitous lockdown drills. But there were also digital measures, including social-media-surveillance software from software firm Social Sentinel, Raptor Technologies’ visitor management software, metal detectors, cameras, threat-assessment teams, and reporting programs. Yet none of that worked against an 18-year-old with an AR-15-style rifle. Social-media-monitoring software is a powerful way to racially profile students and replicate past police discrimination, but it consistently fails to identify those who pose a threat in the future. Instead, the systems lead police and prosecutors to imprison young Black, Latinx, and Muslim men for offhand comments and out-of-context remarks. These tools often rely on simplistic keyword analysis or repurposed algorithms that were initially used for unrelated tasks, and they simply cannot show us who is going to commit a crime before they actually do. And even when schools deploy more sophisticated forms of AI, there’s no way to effectively avoid the bias that has plagued predictive policing in the past. But even as the technology fails, vendors face no consequences, and school officials (unwittingly) reward them for their inefficacy through even more spending. Uvalde’s metal detectors, cameras, and social-media monitoring didn’t save anyone on May 24, and yet the vendors who sold those systems will likely make more money than ever this year. And politicians opposed to gun-safety regulation will continue to hold up empty surveillance answers as our salvation because it’s easier than acknowledging that only actual gun safety will protect our kids from mass shootings. If we want to protect kids, we know the gun-safety measures that will do it. But until we’re ready to act, we’ll be stuck with thoughts, prayers . . . and surveillance tech that doesn’t work. Albert Fox Cahn is the founder and executive director of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project (S.T.O.P.), a New York City-based civil rights and privacy group, a TED fellow, and a visiting fellow at Yale Law School’s Information Society Project. He can be reached on Twitter at @FoxCahn.
Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen
Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

An unsubstantiated online theory has recently taken hold, claiming that family vloggers are fleeing Los Angeles to escape newly introduced California laws designed to protect children featured in

At a press conference in the Oval Office earlier this month, Elon Musk—a billionaire who is not, at least formally, the President of the United States—was asked how the Department of Government Ef

Last Energy, a nuclear upstart backed by an Elon Musk-linked venture capital fund, says it plans to construct 30 microreactors on a site in Texas to supply electricity to data centers across the s

Democratic lawmakers demanded answers from billionaire Elon Musk’s Department of Govern


For years, the creator economy has become increasingly accepted as the future of media. These days, makeup tutorials on TikTok could have the same impact for a brand as a multi-million dollar mark

For more than two decades, users have turned to search engines like Google, typed in a query, and received a familiar list of 10 blue links—the gateway to the wider web. Ranking high on that list,