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How many of you
have ever heard someone say
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privacy is dead?
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Raise your hand.
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How many of you have heard someone say
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they don't care about their privacy
because they don't have anything to hide?
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Go on.
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Now, how many of you
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use any kind of encryption software?
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Raise your hand.
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Or a password to protect
an online account?
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Or curtains or blinds
on your windows at home?
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(Laughter)
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OK, so that's everyone, I think.
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(Laughter)
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So why do you do these things?
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My guess is,
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it's because you care about your privacy.
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The idea that privacy is dead is a myth.
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The idea that people
don't care about their privacy
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because "they have nothing to hide"
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or they've done nothing wrong,
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is also a myth.
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I'm guessing that you would not want
to publicly share on the internet
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for the world to see
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all of your medical records.
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Or your search histories
from your phone or your computer.
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And I bet
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that if the government
wanted to put a chip in your brain
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to transmit every one of your thoughts
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to a centralized government computer,
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you would [unclear] at that ?
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(Laughter)
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That's because you care
about your privacy,
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like every human being.
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So, our world has changed fast.
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And today, there is understandably
a lot of confusion
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about what privacy is and why it matters.
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Privacy is not secrecy.
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It's control.
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I share information with my doctor
about my body and my health,
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expecting that she is not
going to turn around
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and share that information
with my parents,
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or my boss or my kids.
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That information is private, not secret.
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I'm in control over how
that information is shared.
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You've probably heard people say
that there's a fundamental tension
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between privacy on the one hand,
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and safety on the other.
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But the technologies
that advance our privacy,
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also advance our safety.
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Think about fences, door locks,
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curtains on our windows, passwords,
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encryption software.
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All of these technologies
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simultaneously protect
our privacy and our safety.
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Dragnet surveillance
on the other hand protects neither.
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In recent years,
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the federal government
tasked a group of experts,
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called The Privacy and Civil Liberties
Oversight Board,
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with examining post-9/11
government surveillance programs,
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dragnet surveillance programs.
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Those experts could not find
a single example
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of that dragnet surveillance
advancing any safety --
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didn't identify or stop
a single terrorist attack.
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You know what that information
was useful for, though?
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Helping NSA employees spy
on their romantic interests.
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(Laughter)
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Another example is closer to home.
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So millions of people
across the United States and the world
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are adopting "smart home" devices,
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like internet-connected
surveillance cameras.
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But we know that any technology
connected to the internet
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can be hacked.
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And so if a hacker
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gets into your internet-connected
surveillance camera at home,
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they can watch you
and your family coming and going,
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finding just the right time to strike.
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You know what can't be hacked remotely?
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Curtains.
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(Laughter)
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Fences.
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Door locks.
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Privacy is not the enemy of safety.
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It is its guarantor.
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Nonetheless, we daily face
a propaganda onslaught
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telling us that we have to give up
some privacy in exchange for safety
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through surveillance programs.
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Face surveillance is the most dangerous
of these technologies.
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There are two primary ways today
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governments use technologies like this.
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One is face recognition.
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That's to identify someone in an image.
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The second is face surveillance,
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which can be used in concert
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with surveillance camera
networks and data bases
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to create records of all
people's public movements,
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habits and associations,
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effectively creating a digital panopticon.
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This is a panopticon.
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It's a prison designed to allow
a few guards in the center
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to monitor everything happening
in the cells around the perimeter.
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The people in those prison cells
can’t see inside the guard tower,
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but the guards can see
into every inch of those cells.
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The idea here
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is that if the people
in those prison cells
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know they're being watched all the time,
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or could be,
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they'll behave accordingly.
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Similarly, face surveillance enables
a centralized authority,
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in this case the state,
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to monitor the totality of human
movement and association
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in public space.
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And here's what it looks like
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in real life.
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In this case, it's not a guard in a tower,
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but rather a police analyst
in a spy center.
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The prison expands beyond its walls,
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encompassing everyone,
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everywhere, all the time.
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In a free society,
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this should terrify us all.
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For decades now, we've watched cop shows
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that push a narrative that says
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technologies like face surveillance
ultimately serve the public good.
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But real life is not a cop drama.
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The bad guy didn't always do it,
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the cops definitely
aren't always the good guys,
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and the technology doesn't always work.
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Take the case of Steve Talley,
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a financial analyst from Colorado.
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In 2015, Talley was arrested
and he was charged with bank robbery
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on the basis of an error
in a facial recognition system.
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Talley fought that case
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and he eventually was cleared
of those charges,
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but while he was being
persecuted by the state,
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he lost his house, his job and his kids.
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Steve Talley's case is an example
of what can happen
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when the technology fails.
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But face surveillance is just as dangerous
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when it works as advertized.
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Just consider how trivial it would be
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for a government agency
to put a surveillance camera
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outside a building where people meet
for Alcoholics Anonymous meeting.
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They could connect that camera
to a face surveillance algorithm
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and a data base,
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press a button and sit back
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and collect a record of every person
receiving treatment for alcoholism.
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It would be just as easy
for a government agency
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to use this technology
to automatically identify
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every person who attended
the Women's March,
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or a Black Lives Matter protest.
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Even the technology industry
is aware of the gravity of this problem.
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Microsoft's president Brad Smith
has called on Congress to intervene.
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Google for its part has publicly declined
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to ship a face surveillance product
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in part because of these grave
human and civil rights concerns.
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And that's a good thing.
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Because ultimately,
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protecting our open society
is much more important
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than corporate profit.
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The ACLU's nationwide campaign
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to get the government to pump the brakes
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on the adoption on this
dangerous technology
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has prompted reasonable questions
from thoughtful people.
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What makes this technology
in particular so dangerous?
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Why can't we just regulate it?
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In short, why the alarm?
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Face surveillance is uniquely dangerous
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for two related reasons.
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One is the nature
of the technology itself.
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And the second is that our system
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fundamentally lacks the oversight
and accountability mechanisms
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that would be necessary
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to ensure it would not be abused
in the government's hands.
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First, face surveillance enables
a totalizing form of surveillance
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never before possible.
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Every single person's every visit
to a friend's house,
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a government office,
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a house of worship,
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a planned parenthood,
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a cannabis shop,
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a strip club;
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every single person's public movements,
habits and associations,
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documented and catalogued,
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not on one day, but on every day,
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merely with the push of a button.
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This kind of totalizing mass surveillance
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fundamentally threatens
what it means to live in a free society.
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Our freedom of speech,
freedom of association,
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freedom of religion,
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freedom of the press,
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our privacy,
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our right to be left alone.
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You may be thinking,
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"OK, come on, but there are tons
of ways the government can spy on us."
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And yes, it's true,
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the government can track us
through our cell phones,
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but if I want to go to get an abortion,
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or attend a political meeting,
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or even just call in sick,
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and play hooky and go to the beach,
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(Laughter)
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I can leave my phone at home.
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I cannot leave my face at home.
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And that brings me
to my second primary concern.
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How we might meaningfully
regulate this technology.
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Today, if the government wants to know
where I was last week,
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they can't just hop into a time machine
and go back in time and follow me.
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And they also, the local police right now,
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don't maintain any centralized
system of tracking,
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where they're cataloging every person's
public movements all the time,
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just in case that information
some day becomes useful.
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Today, if the government
wants to know where I was last week,
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or last month or last year,
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they have to go to a judge, get a warrant,
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and then serve that warrant
on my phone company,
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which by the way, has a financial interest
in protecting my privacy.
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With face surveillance,
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no such limitations exist.
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This is technology that is 100 percent
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controlled by the government itself.
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So how would a warrant requirement
work in this context?
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Is the government going to go to a judge,
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and get a warrant
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and then serve the warrant on themselves?
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That would be like me giving you my dairy,
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and saying, "Here,
you can hold on to this forever,
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but you can't read it
until I say it's OK."
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So what can we do?
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The only answer to the threat posed
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by the government's use
of face surveillance
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is to deny the government the capacity
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to violate the public's trust,
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by denying the government the ability
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to build these in-house
face-surveillance networks.
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And that's exactly what we're doing.
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The ACLU is part of a nationwide campaign
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to pump the brakes on the government's use
of this dangerous technology.
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We've already been successful,
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from San Francisco
to Somerville, Massachusetts,
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we have passed municipal bans
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on the government’s
use of this technology.
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And plenty of other communities
here in Massachusetts
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and across the country
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are debating similar measures.
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Some people have told me
that this movement is bound to fail.
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That ultimately,
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merely because the technology exists,
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it will be deployed in every context
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by every government everywhere.
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Privacy is dead, right?
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So the narrative goes.
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Well I refuse to accept that narrative.
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And you should too.
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We can't allow Jeff Bezos or the FBI
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to determine the boundaries
of our freedoms in the 21st century.
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If we live in a democracy,
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we are in the driver's seat,
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shaping our collective future.
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We are at a fork in the road right now.
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We can either continue
with business as usual,
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allowing governments to adopt and deploy
these technologies unchecked,
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in our communities, our streets
and our schools,
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or we can take bold action now
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to press pause on the government's use
of face surveillance,
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protect our privacy,
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and to build a safer, freer future
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for all of us.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)