Understanding bias in facial recognition technologies
David Leslie

TL;DR
This paper explores the origins and impacts of bias in facial recognition technologies, highlighting ethical concerns, societal implications, and proposing responsible development and governance strategies.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of how historical discrimination influences FDRTs and discusses ethical considerations and recommendations for responsible use.
Findings
Bias in FDRTs stems from historical discrimination patterns
Biased FDRTs can cause social and recognitional injustices
Ethical frameworks are needed for responsible deployment
Abstract
Over the past couple of years, the growing debate around automated facial recognition has reached a boiling point. As developers have continued to swiftly expand the scope of these kinds of technologies into an almost unbounded range of applications, an increasingly strident chorus of critical voices has sounded concerns about the injurious effects of the proliferation of such systems. Opponents argue that the irresponsible design and use of facial detection and recognition technologies (FDRTs) threatens to violate civil liberties, infringe on basic human rights and further entrench structural racism and systemic marginalisation. They also caution that the gradual creep of face surveillance infrastructures into every domain of lived experience may eventually eradicate the modern democratic forms of life that have long provided cherished means to individual flourishing, social solidarity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI
