UCLA backtracks on facial recognition plans

Amid a national campaign against the use of this technology, UCLA has announced that it will not move forward with its plans to implement the system.

Students across the country have raised concerns about new facial recognition surveillance technology being employed by universities.

Students nationwide raised concerns about universities using biometric surveillance, or facial recognition, on students.

Campus Reform reported last month that at least three California campuses had implemented the software. At the time, the University of San Francisco, the University of Southern California, and Stanford University were confirmed to have systems in place.

[RELATED: Students nationwide fight to ‘Ban Facial Recognition’ technology on campus]

Now, after concerns both nationwide and directly from its own campus, the University of California-Los Angeles has publicly stated that it will not move forward with plans to use such technology and has promised to ban the use of any such technology on campus.

”UCLA will not pursue the use of this technology. We have determined that the potential benefits are limited and vastly outweighed by the concerns of our campus community,” said UCLA administrative vice-chancellor Michael Beck, according to CNET.

“This type of invasive technology poses a profound threat to our basic liberties, civil rights, and academic freedom. Schools that are already using this technology are conducting unethical experiments on their students. Students and staff have a right to know if their administrations are planning to implement biometric surveillance on campus,” said Deputy Director of Fight for the Future Evan Greer. 

Fight for the future is a nonprofit group that advocates for digital rights and is part of the nationwide Ban Facial Recognition campaign against the use of this technology by universities.

[RELATED: EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Students call out college’s ‘creepy’ new tracking technology]

UCLA’s decision comes as other colleges around the country have implemented technologies used to track students’ physical location for the purpose of recording class attendance. The University of Missouri, Syracuse University, Auburn, Central Florida, Indiana have all begun using a smartphone app called SpotterEDU, which the company says is currently being used at 40 schools across the country. 

New York Campus Correspondent Justine Murray asked students at Syracuse University what they think about their locations being tracked.

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