01-26-22 issue

Page 9

valley views We must address facial recognition technology O

ur rights to not have our property or persons searched or seized without a warrant, to not be harassed by the government without good reason, and to conduct our own peaceful affairs with minimal intrusion are increasingly challenged by new technology. Our smartphones track our every movement, many personal conversations happen through electronic communications, and our health and financial data are increasingly stored on devices and in the cloud. These digital records have become so involved in every aspect of our lives that we have essentially created an entire digital version of ourselves as individuals. That’s why the Montana Legislature has passed

several laws in recent years to safeguard people’s digital information. To get access to someone’s location via their cell phone, the government needs a warrant. Same thing if the government wants access to Senator Ken Bogner your text messages or your computer. The media’s electronic communications are off-limits to the government so the press can perform its essential watchdog role for the people without Big Brother’s interference. All these protections for our digital information have been passed and signed into law in Montana. Voters will also have an opportunity to weigh in on this topic directly through a proposed constitutional

Legislative Notes

letters

Bigger than us

Editor, As Congress deliberates voting rights, we should remind our representatives of just how bad things were in a “United” States that was segregated. I grew up, many decades ago, in Jim Crow Texas. My father was a school10 - January 26, 2022

amendment that I was able to get placed on the 2022 ballot. But now, the line between our digital selves and our physical selves is getting blurry. Voice-activated devices can place orders for us. Smartwatches can read our pulse and feed the data to an algorithm that analyzes our health. Ancestry companies hold records of customers’ DNA and compare them to others in a vast database. And facial recognition technology is becoming more powerful and more widespread. We don’t have to imagine what unchecked use of facial recognition might look like because China is already showing us. The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) claims its facial recognition system could scan the faces of China’s 1.4 billion citizens in just one second.

teacher with five children, but, because African Americans commanded insignificant wages, we could always afford a maid. I never knew a black person, except as a servant or laborer. Black people were not in my schools, not at church, not at gatherings, and not in my family. Lynchings were not talked about much, but they were part of life,

The CCP is using facial recognition to track the movements of 11 million citizens who are part of an ethnic minority that it is oppressing, detaining, and abusing. The technology is central to China’s mass surveillance state. In the United States, facial recognition technology is increasingly being used by law enforcement and other government agencies for a variety of purposes. Montana’s Frontier Institute confirmed through public record requests that several Montana government agencies have used facial recognition, although to what extent is not fully clear. Individuals frequently use the technology to unlock smartphones and tag friends in social media photos. Like any technology, facial recognition is a tool, and it can be used for

and I remember adults talking about whether the civil rights workers somehow got what they deserved. Today, this sounds almost too dystopian to believe. That is because of the difficult and dangerous work of the Civil Rights Movement - work that protected the right of African Americans to vote - and, in doing so, proValley Journal

good and bad. The Legislature must address facial recognition to ensure Montanans can use the technology without sacrificing our privacy and our rights. As digital privacy has been a bipartisan issue in Montana, biometric privacy should be as well. Currently the Legislature’s Economic Affairs Interim Committee, which I chair, is studying the issue. We plan to bring legislation to the next session in 2023 addressing facial recognition technology. Throughout this year we’ll be taking input from Montanans on what that legislation should look like. If you have ideas on how facial recognition should or should not be used in the Last Best Place, please get in touch with us. Our contact information, schedule, and more information are all avail-

tected all of us. Today, African American votes matter, and this group is participating in every aspect of American life. There are educators, journalists, attorneys, doctors, scientists, actors, musicians, and artists at work for the common good - and all of us are see page 11

able on the Legislature’s website under the Economic Affairs Interim Committee. Sen. Ken Bogner, R-Miles City, is the chairman of the Montana Legislature’s Economic Affairs Interim Committee

LETTER POLICY

Letters to the editor are welcome. The content is the opinion of the letter writer and not the newspaper. The decision to publish letters is made by the editor. Letters must be 350 words or less. A writer will only be published twice per month. Letters may be edited for content or length, or may not be published if considered libelous, in poor taste, spiteful, self-promotional or of limited interest to the general readership. Space limitations also dictate when or if letters are published. Letters must be signed by the author and name, address and phone number must be included – phone number is for verification purposes only. Letters from organizations must include the name of at least one author. Please limit “thank you” letters to four people/organizations or less. Deadline is 5 p.m. Friday to publish the following week. Opinions expressed in this section are not necessarily those of the newspaper.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.