Person identification, human rights and ethical principles
: rethinking biometrics in the era of artificial intelligence : Study Panel for the Future of Science and TechnologyAutor(es):
González Fuster, Gloria | Nadolna Peeters, Michalina
Parlamento Europeo. Dirección General de Servicios de Estudios Parlamentarios | Parlamento Europeo. Dirección General de Servicios de Estudios Parlamentarios. Unidad de Prospectiva Científica [STOA]
Editor: Brussels : European Union, December 2021Descripción: 81 p. ; 1 documento PDFTipo de contenido: textoTipo de medio: electrónico
Tipo de soporte: recurso en líneaISBN: 978-92-846-8818-0Tema(s): Tecnologías habilitadoras digitales | Inteligencia Artificial | IA | reconocimiento facial | biometría | principios éticos | derechos humanosRecursos en línea: Acceso al documento Resumen: This study aims to identify the impact on fundamental rights of current and upcoming developments, and to put forward relevant policy options at European Union (EU) level. Taking as a starting point the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council laying down harmonised rules on AI, presented by the European Commission in April 2021, the study reviews key controversies surrounding what the proposal addresses through the notions of 'remote biometric identification' (which most notably includes live facial recognition), 'biometric categorisation' and so-called 'emotion recognition'. Identifying gaps in the proposed approaches to all these issues, the study puts them in the context of broader regulatory discussions. More generally, the study stresses that the scope of the current legal approach to biometric data in EU law, centred on the use of such data for identification purposes, leaves out numerous current and expected developments that are not centred on the identification of individuals, but nevertheless have a serious impact on their fundamental rights and democracy
Tipo de ítem | Ubicación actual | Colección | Signatura | Estado | Notas | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
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Informes |
CDO
El Centro de Documentación del Observatorio Nacional de las Telecomunicaciones y de la Sociedad de la Información (CDO) os da la bienvenida al catálogo bibliográfico sobre recursos digitales en las materias de Tecnologías de la Información y telecomunicaciones, Servicios públicos digitales, Administración Electrónica y Economía digital.
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Colección digital | Acceso libre online | 1000020177082 |
Bibliografía: p. 60-68
This study aims to identify the impact on
fundamental rights of current and upcoming developments, and to
put forward relevant policy options at European Union (EU) level.
Taking as a starting point the proposal for a regulation of the
European Parliament and of the Council laying down harmonised
rules on AI, presented by the European Commission in April 2021,
the study reviews key controversies surrounding what the proposal
addresses through the notions of 'remote biometric identification'
(which most notably includes live facial recognition), 'biometric
categorisation' and so-called 'emotion recognition'.
Identifying gaps in the proposed approaches to all these issues, the
study puts them in the context of broader regulatory discussions.
More generally, the study stresses that the scope of the current legal
approach to biometric data in EU law, centred on the use of such
data for identification purposes, leaves out numerous current and
expected developments that are not centred on the identification of
individuals, but nevertheless have a serious impact on their
fundamental rights and democracy
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