Senators Challenge TSA's Expanding Use of Facial Recognition at Airports
A bipartisan group of senators urges a halt to the TSA's facial recognition expansion, citing privacy concerns and questionable security benefits.
- 14 senators from both parties express concerns over privacy and civil liberties implications of TSA's facial recognition technology.
- Senators argue the technology, which could soon be at 430 airports, does not enhance air travel safety and has a high error rate.
- The TSA plans to expand facial recognition from 25 to over 430 airports by July, despite congressional pushback.
- Senators leverage upcoming FAA reauthorization bill to demand rigorous oversight of TSA's facial recognition program.
- Concerns include potential for widespread government surveillance and the technology's optional nature, which may change.