The reason I say this is that, as you pointed out, there is a possibility for people to do indirectly what they can't do directly while we work out the legal frame that could be used in terms of the establishment of the use of such technologies.
This technology really came to my attention three years ago now. One of the public broadcasters here in Canada, in Quebec, in French Canada, actually decided to use AI facial recognition technology to try to identify members of Quebec's National Assembly. As you say, and all studies have pointed out, if you are person of colour, if you are non-white, the error rate increases dramatically.
It would seem to me that it would behoove all of us to be careful in terms of trying to establish some limits as to how this information is collected and used in any context, not just in the criminal justice system.
Would you agree with that?