Thank you.
I'm not an academic. I leave that to you, sir, but I go back to news reports out of the Welsh police, where the senior-ranking officer said that facial recognition—and I'm paraphrasing—came up with something like 92% false positives, and he said that was okay, because no technology is perfect. That was in 2017. In 2020 or 2021, the chief of police of Chicago, I believe it was, said that facial recognition was something like 95% erroneous.
That can have profound implications on people's lives, because once you are identified as a person of interest, you're in the system, and then any time a cop looks at you, they run your name and you're already there. There's already a presumption that they should look a little more closely at you, because the facial recognition got it wrong.