DHS leaders mull biometrics, privacy with charmed circle of insiders
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The conference sponsors'a group of DHS agencies'afforded access to the unclassified conference to select nonprofit organizations concerned with privacy issues from this country and Europe, but barred the media from most sessions of the meeting.
Senior Homeland Security Department officials joined their counterparts from foreign governments, other federal agencies, some IT vendors and pressure groups in the domestic and international privacy arena to discuss privacy policies and biometric technology at a conference in Washington today.
The conference sponsors'a group of DHS agencies'afforded access to the unclassified conference to select nonprofit organizations concerned with privacy issues from this country and Europe, but barred the media from most sessions of the meeting without explanation.
Stewart Baker, DHS' assistant secretary for policy, offered opening remarks about concerns the public has about new biometric technology and information sharing. Baker highlighted the public's concern about three factors involved in biometrics and information sharing policy:
- The 'yuk factor,' or distaste that people might feel about unfamiliar, invasive technologies such as fingerprinting
- The public's concern that biometric information gathered for identification purposes could also reveal other information, such as when a DNA sample might suggest that a person or their children could be especially vulnerable to a health problem and
- Concerns the public might have about the expansion of the categories of uses for personal information, such as when information gathered for counterterrorism purposes might later be applied to problems such as tracking down people who don't pay child support or speeding tickets.
- The American Civil Liberties Union
- Center for Democracy and Technology
- Competitive Enterprise Institute
- The Center for Science, Society and Citizenship of Italy
- The Electronic Privacy Information Center
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Hastings Center
- International Forum for Biophilosophy of Belgium
- University of Pittsburgh
- University of Rome
- West Virginia University
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