2023
DOI: 10.14763/2023.1.1705
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The grey-zones of public-private surveillance: Policy tendencies of facial recognition for public security in Brazilian cities

Abstract: The provision of biometric surveillance systems in cities' administration in Brazil is commonly delegated to private companies, where businesses supply facial recognition technologies (FRTs) to law enforcement entities. These public-private partnerships often manifest a lack of transparency, while counting on the legitimacy of the public administration to offer public services. These regulatory "grey-zones" affect smart city policies in Brazil, sidelining civil society and researchers, while narratives of effi… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The regulatory landscape for smart cities is still evolving, presenting challenges in ensuring adequate safeguards for data protection. Different jurisdictions may have varying approaches to privacy regulations, complicating matters for global smart city deployments (Ramiro and Cruz, 2023). The absence of standardized frameworks and clear ethical guidelines can lead to disparate practices in data handling and privacy protection.…”
Section: Smart Cities: Their Inherent Risks and Challengesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The regulatory landscape for smart cities is still evolving, presenting challenges in ensuring adequate safeguards for data protection. Different jurisdictions may have varying approaches to privacy regulations, complicating matters for global smart city deployments (Ramiro and Cruz, 2023). The absence of standardized frameworks and clear ethical guidelines can lead to disparate practices in data handling and privacy protection.…”
Section: Smart Cities: Their Inherent Risks and Challengesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He arrives at the conclusion that the data protection law and the AI Act proposal do not offer sufficient safeguards for fundamental rights risks associated with facial recognition and its disproportionate use in policing. The deployment of facial recognition technologies in policing is further addressed in the article by Ramiro and Cruz (2023), who focus on the role of public-private partnerships in technology governance. In technology regulation, not all jurisdictions follow the European fundamental-rights-driven route.…”
Section: Human Rights-based Approach By Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In technology regulation, not all jurisdictions follow the European fundamental-rights-driven route. Analysing the "grey zones of surveillance" executed by private companies, Ramiro and Cruz (2023) show how consumer protection law, and methods more closely connected to the HRBA in cities, strategic litigation and activism, have helped to limit the adoption of facial recognition technology in Brazil.…”
Section: Human Rights-based Approach By Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
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