A newly released DHS privacy document reveals plans to give local police the same facial recognition tools ICE agents use. This effectively deputizes local law enforcement into federal immigration surveillance without public debate.
immigrationFriday, June 19
ICE facial recognition app expands to local police
Today's immigration news is dominated by two surveillance stories and a fee hike. The big reveal: local police working with ICE can now access a facial recognition app, expanding federal reach far beyond border enforcement. Meanwhile, the UK Home Office faces a petition to stop using flawed AI age estimation on asylum-seeking children. Japan quietly quintupled visa fees.
Surveillance expansion
The most consequential story today is about how ICE is quietly scaling its surveillance network.
A petition is calling on the UK Home Secretary to stop using AI facial age estimation on asylum-seeking children, citing a 2.5-year error margin and lower accuracy for people of colour. A wrong call could mean a child being treated as an adult.
Visa fee hike
Japan's visa fee increase is a separate but notable policy shift that affects travelers and immigrants.
Japan's cabinet approved a fivefold increase in visa fees, from 3,000 yen to 15,000 yen for single-entry visas, effective July 1. The government expects an extra 116 billion yen in revenue this fiscal year.
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