Privacy Fears as Police Use Facial Recognition at PM Modi's Ramlila Maidan Rally

It was the first time the facial recognition technology was used to screen the crowd at a political rally, according to technology analysts.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 31 December 2019 10:35 IST
Highlights
  • Police in Delhi used facial recognition software to screen crowds
  • The move has raised concerns about privacy and mass surveillance
  • Delhi Police used Automated Facial Recognition System at the arlly

Rise of cloud computing and artificial intelligence have popularised the use of facial recognition

Photo Credit: Prakash Singh/ AFP

Police in Delhi used facial recognition software to screen crowds at a recent political rally - a first for India - raising concerns about privacy and mass surveillance amidst nationwide protests against a new citizenship law. The Automated Facial Recognition System (AFRS) software that the Delhi Police had installed to identify missing children, was used at Prime Minister Narendra Modi's rally on December 22, a police spokesman said on Monday, without giving further details.

It was the first time the technology - which is increasingly deployed in airports, offices and cafes in India - was used to screen the crowd at a political rally, according to technology analysts.

"The use of the system for profiling and surveillance at public congregations is illegal and unconstitutional. It is an act of mass surveillance," said Apar Gupta, executive director of digital advocacy group Internet Freedom Foundation.

Advertisement

"From building an underlying database of people from public protests to running it on crowds of people attending rallies, this directly impairs the rights of ordinary Indians from assembly, speech and political participation," he said.

Advertisement

The Indian Express cited a Delhi Police spokesman as saying the police had used the technology "based on credible intelligence inputs about possible disruptions".

"Delhi Police assures that best industry-standard checks and balances against any potential misuse of data are in place. Racial or religious profiling is never a relevant parameter while building these datasets," the spokesman was cited as saying.

Advertisement

Worldwide, the rise of cloud computing and artificial intelligence technologies have popularised the use of facial recognition for a range of applications from tracking criminals to catching truant students.

In India, facial recognition technology was installed in several airports this year, and the government plans to roll out a nationwide system, likely to be the world's biggest, to stop criminals and find missing children.

Advertisement

Use of the technology at the political rally comes amidst nationwide protests against a new citizenship law, in which at least 25 people have been killed.

Pictures of police holding video cameras at some protests have sparked concerns that images of protesters are being added to the facial recognition database.

Authorities have said the technology is needed to bolster a severely under-policed country.

But "its use has strayed from finding missing children to being deployed in peaceful public gatherings" with a complete lack of any oversight or accountability, said Gupta.

Supreme Court, in a landmark ruling in 2017 on the national biometric identity card programme Aadhaar, said individual privacy is a fundamental right.

Yet the ruling has not checked the rollout of facial recognition technology, Gupta said.

Technology site Comparitech ranked Delhi among the world's most surveilled cities in a report this year.

The Personal Data Protection Bill, introduced in parliament this month, empowers the government to ask a company to provide anonymised personal data and other non-personal data, for delivering welfare services and for policies.

© Thomson Reuters 2019

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. iQOO Neo 11 With Snapdragon 8 Elite SoC Launched: Price, Specifications
  2. Top OTT Releases of the Week: Kantara Chapter 1, Lokah Chapter 1, Idli Kadai, and More
  3. Reliance Offers Free 18-Month Google AI Pro with Gemini, Veo to Jio Users
  4. Realme GT 8 Pro Will Launch in India in November With This Chipset
  5. Gemini 3 AI Model Will Be Released Soon, Says Google CEO Sundar Pichai
  6. Vivo X300 Series With 200-Megapixel Zeiss Camera Launched Globally
  7. Canva Brings Revamped Video Editor, New AI Tools and a Marketing Platform
  8. Stray is Coming to PS Plus Essential Tier in November
  9. Vivo X300 Series Launching Today: Everything You Need to Know
  1. Scientists May Have Finally Solved the Sun’s Mysteriously Hot Atmosphere Puzzle
  2. Vivo X300 Series Launched Globally With 200-Megapixel Zeiss Camera, Up to 6.78-Inch Display: Price, Features
  3. Canva Introduces Revamped Video Editor, New AI Tools and a Marketing Platform
  4. Thode Door Thode Paas OTT Release Date: Know When and Where to Watch it Online
  5. Blackmail Now Streaming Online: Know Where to Watch This Tamil Crime Thriller Movie
  6. Eva Husson’s Playdate OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch it Online?
  7. Raj Tarun's Chiranjeeva OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch it Online?
  8. Bitchat Becomes Jamaica’s Go-to App as Hurricane Melissa Cripples Communication
  9. Google Maps Is Reportedly Developing a New Power Saving Mode for Navigation
  10. Take-Two CEO Says AI Won't Be 'Very Good' at Making a Game Like Grand Theft Auto
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.