AI surveillance is being supercharged – and it will chill social progress
3 hours ago
- #privacy erosion
- #AI surveillance
- #social control
- AI-powered surveillance systems will track public and private activities, identifying violations like shoplifting or jaywalking, and immediately link them to official records, notifying authorities and potentially the public.
- China's extensive surveillance infrastructure uses AI and facial recognition to enforce rules, as seen with citizen Lao Duan being publicly shamed on a billboard for financial issues, integrating with social credit systems.
- AI surveillance is expanding globally, including in the U.S., where it monitors immigrants and protesters under the guise of security but often aims for social control, as noted by tech leaders like Larry Ellison.
- These systems pose policy challenges: technical biases, lack of auditability, and automated enforcement that can promote discrimination and undermine transparency, accountability, and the rule of law.
- Chilling effects from AI surveillance cause self-censorship and conformity, stifling dissent, creativity, and social progress, as detailed in Jon Penney's book, with mechanisms like personalization and uncertainty amplifying impacts.
- Historical surveillance methods, such as FBI wiretapping or East Germany's networks, are archaic compared to modern AI-enhanced systems, which are unprecedented and closer to dystopian science fiction depictions.
- To counter AI surveillance, policy measures like bans on facial recognition, stronger privacy laws, AI regulations, and breaking up state-tech cartels can help mitigate its invasive use and protect democratic foundations.