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Amazon Is Latest Tech Giant to Face Staff Backlash Over Government Work

Amazon employees have joined civil rights groups and investors in protesting the company’s sale of facial recognition technology to law enforcement agencies. Amazon began marketing a facial recognition system, called Rekognition, to law enforcement as a means of identifying people suspected of committing crimes shortly after the tool was introduced in 2016. The system — which analyzes images and videos and compares them with databases of photographs to pick out individuals — has been used by the Police Department in Orlando, Fla., and the Sheriff’s Department in Washington County, Ore.

In a letter addressed to the company’s chief executive, Jeff Bezos, that was published by The Hill, employees wrote:

We refuse to contribute to tools that violate human rights. As ethically concerned Amazonians, we demand a choice in what we build, and a say in how it is used.

The letter also criticized the data science company Palantir’s use of Amazon’s cloud computing systems to carry out work for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Amazon declined to comment but pointed to a blog post published on its website this month after the American Civil Liberties Union called for Amazon to ban the sale of Rekognition to the police. Matt Wood, general manager of artificial intelligence at Amazon Web Services, wrote:

We believe it is the wrong approach to impose a ban on promising new technologies because they might be used by bad actors for nefarious purposes in the future. The world would be a very different place if we had restricted people from buying computers because it was possible to use that computer to do harm. The same can be said of thousands of technologies upon which we all rely each day. Through responsible use, the benefits have far outweighed the risks.

Earlier this week, 100 Microsoft employees wrote a letter to the company’s chief executive, Satya Nadella, protesting the software maker’s work with ICE. Microsoft holds a $19.4 million contract with ICE for a project relating to data processing and artificial intelligence. According to The Verge, the letter now has 300 signatories.

With government contracts so lucrative, the question is whether the concerns of employees will push tech executives to action.

Early signs suggest they may — at least to a degree.

The campaigns at Amazon and Microsoft echo one by Google employees earlier this year. Workers there sought to halt an A.I. project that Google was working on with the Pentagon that used machine learning to improve the accuracy of drone missions.

By JAMIE CONDLIFFE

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/22/business/dealbook/amazon-staff-facial-recognition-protest.html

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