I will answer the question by going back to the point that I made early in my statement that facial recognition can serve society. At the border, for instance, it can greatly accelerate and make more efficient the triage of individuals who wish to cross the border. In police and law enforcement, it can facilitate the resolution of crimes or find missing persons.
I would not start from the premise that facial recognition should be banned completely or even in certain sectors completely, as in law enforcement, for instance. It can be useful, but it is very special in that it collects the attributes of a person that are immutable. If there's a breach of that information in the company or the government department that has collected it, you cannot change your biometrics like you can change a password. It is immutable and that means that this particular technology needs to be regulated very rigorously so that it does bear fruit and provides benefits to society without creating nightmares for individuals who, again, can no longer protect their privacy if someone uses their biometrics, including facial recognition, for nefarious ends.
That would be my answer for the border.