seb
sklovig.bsky.social
seb
@sklovig.bsky.social
27 followers 42 following 77 posts
Data and Ethics Editor at Computer Weekly https://www.techtarget.com/contributor/Sebastian-Klovig-Skelton
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The UK’s policing minister has confirmed the government will consult on the use of live facial recognition by law enforcement before expanding its use throughout England, but so far, the technology has been deployed with minimal public debate or consultation www.computerweekly.com/news/3666323...
UK government to consult on police live facial recognition use | Computer Weekly
The UK’s policing minister has confirmed the government will consult on the use of live facial recognition by law enforcement before expanding its use throughout England, but so far, the technology ha...
www.computerweekly.com
“MS is unable to specify what data originating from SPA will be processed outside the UK for support functions,” said the SPA in a detailed DPIA created for its use of O365. “To try and mitigate this risk, SPA asked to see … [the transfer risk assessments]. MS declined to provide the assessments.”
Without this information, the policing bodies are unable to satisfy the law enforcement-specific data protection rules laid out in Part 3 of the Data Protection Act 2018 (DPA18), which places strict limits on the transfer of policing data outside the UK.
“Entities that previously enabled and profited from Palestinian elimination and erasure within the economy of occupation, instead of disengaging are now involved in the economy of genocide.”
“After October 2023, long-standing systems of control, exploitation and dispossession metamorphosed into economic, technological and political infrastructures mobilised to inflict mass violence and immense destruction,” she said.
She said that if the companies supplying these technologies had conducted the proper human rights due diligence – including IBM, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon and Palantir – they would have divested “long ago” from involvement in Israel’s illegal occupation of Gaza and the West Bank.
In an investigative report examining “the role of corporate entities in sustaining the illegal Israeli occupation and its ongoing genocidal campaign in Gaza”, Francesca Albanese outlined the key role the technology sector plays in “sustaining the Israeli settler-colonial project"
Technology firms globally are actively “aiding and abetting” Israel’s “crimes of apartheid and genocide” against Palestinians, said United Nations special rapporteur in an urgent call for the companies to cease their business activities in the region
www.computerweekly.com/news/3666269...
Tech firms complicit in ‘economy of genocide’, says UN rapporteur | Computer Weekly
A UN special rapporteur has called for technology firms operating in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories to immediately halt their activities, in wider report about the role corporate enti...
www.computerweekly.com
Reposted by seb
A good overview of the thorny implications of the newly enlisted tech execs as reservists by @sklovig.bsky.social with commentary by the excellent @sophiagoodfriend.bsky.social and myself.
Predictive policing technologies infringe human rights “at their heart” and should be prohibited in the UK, argues Green MP Siân Berry, after tabling an amendment to the government’s forthcoming Crime and Policing Bill www.computerweekly.com/news/3666266...
MPs propose ban on predictive policing | Computer Weekly
MPs are attempting to amend the UK government’s forthcoming Crime and Policing Bill so that it prohibits the use of controversial predictive policing systems.
www.computerweekly.com
Reposted by seb
I was glad to speak with @sklovig.bsky.social about the militarisation of the US’ AI industry

It’s an important look at how Silicon Valley is working with the Trump admin to turbocharge AI weapons development
Includes comment from @elkeschwarz.bsky.social and @sophiagoodfriend.bsky.social, who kindly took time out of their days to speak with me about the developments and share their insights
Reposted by seb
refreshing to find out that some bombs are too unseemly to drop
npr.org NPR @npr.org · Jun 24
Presidents have been known to use salty language behind closed doors. But President Trump may be the first to very deliberately drop an f-bomb on camera.
Breaking another presidential norm, Trump drops the f-bomb on camera
Presidents have been known to use salty language behind closed doors. But President Trump may be the first to very deliberately drop an f-bomb on camera.
n.pr
Reposted by seb
v cool how everyone told the home office this would suck, and they did it anyway and scrapped the physical residency cards as a bonus
UK error-prone eVisa system is ‘anxiety-inducing’

People having technical errors with the Home Office eVisa system explain the psychological toll of not being able to reliably prove their immigration status in the face of a hostile and unresponsive bureaucracy
www.computerweekly.com/news/3666253...
UK’s error-prone eVisa system is ‘anxiety-inducing’ | Computer Weekly
People experiencing technical errors with the Home Office’s electronic visa system have spoken with Computer Weekly about the psychological toll of not being able to reliably prove their immigration s...
www.computerweekly.com
In one case that was reported to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), the technical errors with data held by the Home Office were so severe that it found a breach of UK data protection law
Each also described how the “inordinate amount of stress” associated with not being able to reliably prove their immigration status has been made worse by a lack of responsiveness and help from the Home Office, which they accused of essentially leaving them in the lurch
Those affected by the eVisa system’s technical failings told Computer Weekly, on condition of anonymity, that the entire experience has been “anxiety-inducing” and described how their lives had been thrust into “uncertainty” by the transition
UK error-prone eVisa system is ‘anxiety-inducing’

People having technical errors with the Home Office eVisa system explain the psychological toll of not being able to reliably prove their immigration status in the face of a hostile and unresponsive bureaucracy
www.computerweekly.com/news/3666253...
UK’s error-prone eVisa system is ‘anxiety-inducing’ | Computer Weekly
People experiencing technical errors with the Home Office’s electronic visa system have spoken with Computer Weekly about the psychological toll of not being able to reliably prove their immigration s...
www.computerweekly.com