Regulating Facial Processing Technologies: Tensions Between Legal and Technical Considerations in the Application of Illinois BIPA
Rui-Jie Yew, Alice Xiang

TL;DR
This paper examines the legal and technical challenges of regulating facial processing technologies under Illinois BIPA, highlighting tensions and implications for law, technology, and privacy protection.
Contribution
It analyzes BIPA litigation to identify disconnects between legal definitions and technical implementations of FPT, informing better regulation and development practices.
Findings
Legal interpretations may incentivize undesirable FPT development
Litigation reveals limitations of technical methods for privacy protection
Points of tension can guide more nuanced regulation and development
Abstract
Harms resulting from the development and deployment of facial processing technologies (FPT) have been met with increasing controversy. Several states and cities in the U.S. have banned the use of facial recognition by law enforcement and governments, but FPT are still being developed and used in a wide variety of contexts where they primarily are regulated by state biometric information privacy laws. Among these laws, the 2008 Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) has generated a significant amount of litigation. Yet, with most BIPA lawsuits reaching settlements before there have been meaningful clarifications of relevant technical intricacies and legal definitions, there remains a great degree of uncertainty as to how exactly this law applies to FPT. What we have found through applications of BIPA in FPT litigation so far, however, points to potential disconnects between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaw, AI, and Intellectual Property · Dispute Resolution and Class Actions · Patient Dignity and Privacy
