时间:2026-04-08 11:54:53 来源:网络整理编辑:百科
When President Donald Trump issued his infamous travel ban in January, it consumed headlines for day
When President Donald Trump issued his infamous travel ban in January, it consumed headlines for days.
But little attention was paid to other provisions in the executive order--including one that sped up the implementation of a program that could soon result in the facial scanning of every person taking a flight from anywhere in the United States.
SEE ALSO:This bathroom uses facial recognition technology to ration toilet paperThe program is a part of a larger plan called Biometric Exit, which is operated by the folks at Customs and Border Protection, a division of the Department of Homeland Security.
Biometric Exit had been in the works for well over a decade. The program's intent is to make sure U.S. visa holders leaving the country aren't lying about their identity. CBP has decided to do this through photo-matching.
The process works by matching passport and visa photos of U.S. visa holders to photos taken at the airport from which they're departing the country. This helps the U.S. make sure the people getting on the plane are the same people who hold those visas.
The agency plans to expand the program to seven different airports over the summer, and they already started a beta program in 2016 at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta. CBP tested facial recognition on passengers taking select flights to Tokyo, Japan and Mexico City.
In an emailed statement, CBP insisted they're focused on integrating facial recognition into the traveling process such that passengers barely notice the added security measure. Facial recognition will have to be "simple for travelers to comply with" and "travelers shouldn't have to learn something new." The statement also mentioned a focus on privacy several times.
Credit: Education Images/UIG/Getty Images/Universal Images GroupBut there are reasons to be skeptical of the agency's supposed focus on privacy. Facial recognition technology isn't able to recognize white women or black people as well as it's able to identify white men, leading to an increased likelihood that such technology would more often mismatch a white woman or black person's photos. It's unclear what the CBP plans to do to mitigate that bias, if anything.
"There's a risk that, because of who you are -- what gender you are or the color of your skin -- the system might be more likely to make a mistake," said Alvaro Bedoya, the director of Georgetown University's Center on Privacy and Technology.
There's also a significant chance that this facial recognition program will expand to all flyers in the United States, including American citizens.
CBP Deputy Assistant Commissioner John Wagner alluded to this possibility at a conference last week, when he said he wanted to make facial recognition “available for every transaction in the airport where you have to show an ID today.”
"We are working closely with stakeholders to ensure successful implementation of biometric exit and exploring potential for inbound arrivals and other processes," CBP public affairs officer Jennifer Gabris said in an emailed statement.
"I don't think people realize what's coming"
At that point, it's not hard to cross-reference photos of American citizens with other photo databases.
"Why not suddenly run those photos against databases of criminal record photos?" Bedoya asked. "Suddenly flying isn't just about flying and safety in the air, it's about putting people in jail."
Bedoya knows facial recognition isn't something the vast majority of flyers are likely to encounter in the U.S. at the moment, but he said the situation he described isn't as farfetched as some might presume. Databases work by cross-referencing with other databases, and there are plenty of photos in databases of those with criminal records.
There's also, of course, a good chance that this facial recognition technology could misidentify travelers in a way that could -- at the very least -- ruin a trip.
"I don't think people realize what's coming," he said.
TopicsCybersecurityFacial RecognitionPrivacy
Tesla's rumored P100D could make Ludicrous mode even more Ludicrous2026-04-08 11:17
9日賠率 :皇馬戰平巴黎遺憾出局 曼城再次獲大勝2026-04-08 11:10
亞足聯官網:國足VS沙特將在北京時間3月24日23點開球2026-04-08 10:23
歐足聯已對巴黎高層展開調查 要求皇馬方提供證據2026-04-08 10:17
Daughter gives her 1002026-04-08 10:12
庫鳥8場4球3助攻維拉超尷尬 降薪70%簽他也難收場2026-04-08 10:01
互相推鍋 !驚曝內馬爾多納魯馬激烈爭吵 險些互毆2026-04-08 09:54
津門虎補齊艾哈邁多夫欠薪 國際足聯注冊禁令已解除2026-04-08 09:36
Two astronauts just installed a new parking spot on the International Space Station2026-04-08 09:28
重慶隊官方 :主帥張外龍已返回中國 隔離後將帶隊備戰2026-04-08 09:20
Man stumbles upon his phone background in real life2026-04-08 11:41
左右為難的梅西 !自帶傳控體係 卻和巴黎背道而馳2026-04-08 11:29
水慶霞:怕國內媒體報道 我們在亞洲杯封鎖了王霜受傷的消息2026-04-08 11:01
媒體人 :欠外援的錢有人管 中國球員即使仲裁勝訴也無法兌現2026-04-08 10:51
This 'sh*tpost' bot makes terrible memes so you don't have to2026-04-08 10:30
前中國女足代表人物範運傑執教建業女足 將率隊出征全國錦標賽2026-04-08 10:23
青島體育局副局長調研青島海牛 盛讚代表青島足球希望2026-04-08 10:22
巴黎患上軟骨症!6年內3遭大逆轉 金錢換不來氣質2026-04-08 10:16
Ivanka Trump's unpaid interns share cringeworthy financial advice2026-04-08 09:53
C羅決裂主帥不可避免 曼聯不進歐冠或赴巴黎投梅西2026-04-08 09:51