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Amazon (AMZN) investors voted on Wednesday to continue selling the company’s controversial facial recognition technology to governments and law enforcement agencies around the world.
The vote, which took place Tuesday during Amazon’s annual shareholders meeting, comes amid widespread backlash against facial recognition technology and the potential for it to inappropriately target women and minorities.
Amazon’s board of directors recommended rejecting the proposed ban on sales of the technology, as well as a secondary measure that calls for the company to issue a report on the risks of governments using the technology.
Amazon currently works with law enforcement agencies in the U.S., but the American Civil Liberties Union (A.C.L.U.) and M.I.T. Media Lab have both said the technology is flawed, an accusation Amazon rejects.
Technologies like Amazon’s are facing increasing scrutiny from state and local governments, as well as civil rights groups that fear it will be used to spy on everyday Americans. It has become such a hot issue that companies like Microsoft and Google are rejecting requests for the technologies to be used by some agencies.
The board’s vote
Investors opposed to Amazon’s sale of its facial recognition technology, called Amazon Rekognition, asked shareholders to vote to: “prohibit sales of facial recognition technology to government agencies unless the Board concludes, after an evaluation using independent evidence, that the technology does not cause or contribute to actual or potential violations of civil and human rights.”
Shareholders were also seeking to have Amazon commission an independent study of Rekognition to determine whether it posed a threat to minorities, immigrants, or activists; if it would be sold to authoritarian regimes; and what the operational and financial risks of such issues would cause.
So far, Amazon has piloted its Rekognition technology with the Orlando Police Department in Florida and the Washington County Sheriff’s Office in Oregon. Both instances were met with resistance from civil rights groups, AI specialists, and defense attorneys, who fear it will disproportionately target minorities and lead to false arrests.
In July 2018, the A.C.L.U. ran a study that it said matched the headshots of 28 members of Congress to mugshots of known criminals. A secondary test performed by the M.I.T. Media Lab in January 2019 and reported by The New York Times found that Rekognition had a hard time identifying female faces and the faces of dark-skinned individuals.
Representatives from Amazon, however, pushed back against those claims, saying both the A.C.L.U. and M.I.T. Media Lab studies didn’t use the Rekognition technology properly. The company also issued a lengthy response statement on how it uses Rekognition.