{"componentChunkName":"component---src-templates-blog-post-js","path":"/blog/watch-now-facial-recognition-technology-was-tested-by-normal-police-in-training/","result":{"data":{"site":{"siteMetadata":{"title":"No Frills News"}},"contentfulNfnPost":{"postTitle":"Watch now: Facial recognition technology was tested by Normal police in training","slug":"watch-now-facial-recognition-technology-was-tested-by-normal-police-in-training","createdLocal":"2021-05-16 14:30:50.263146","publishDate":"None","feedName":"Image Recognition","sourceUrl":{"sourceUrl":"https://www.pantagraph.com/news/local/public_safety/watch-now-facial-recognition-technology-was-tested-by-normal-police-in-training/article_38381073-97f5-517e-8a77-9e7272f5580a.html"},"postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Critics say it’s invasive — especially when used as surveillance — and that it can be discriminatory against people of color.\nThe Macon County Sheriff’s Department ran between 1,001 and 5,000 searches on Clearview AI in less than a year.\nThe Decatur Police Department also ran between 51 and 100 searches, but Police Chief James Getz Jr. said those coincided with experimental searches with the Macon County Sheriff's office.\nEd German, a forensic scientist who spent time with the FBI, CIA, and as a criminal investigator with the U.S. Army, now works for the Macon County Sheriff’s Department training interns and officers on forensics.\nHe said the department had a paid subscription to Clearview AI because “it works really, really well.”They had a Clearview account until “we had no choice,” German said.</p>"}}}},"pageContext":{"slug":"watch-now-facial-recognition-technology-was-tested-by-normal-police-in-training"}}}