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US increases facial recognition at border to track non-citizens

According to a document released by the government on Friday, the U.S. plans to expand its use of facial recognition to track noncitizens who enter and leave the country to combat visa fraud and overstaying.

New regulations will expand on a pilot program that allowed border officials to take photos of non-citizens at airports or other points of departure.

The regulation is set to come into effect on December 26 and could require that other biometrics such as DNA or fingerprints be submitted.

The law also allows border officials to use facial recognition on children under 14 years of age and older people over 79 years, two groups currently exempted. The new border rules are part of a larger effort by U.S. president Donald Trump to crackdown on illegal immigration. The Republican president has increased resources to secure border between the U.S. and Mexico, but he's also taken steps in order to reduce the number people who overstay their visas. Watchdog groups are concerned about privacy issues raised by the growing use of facial identification in U.S. Airports. In a report from 2024, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights stated that tests showed facial recognition had a higher likelihood of misidentifying Black people and other minorities.

In 2023, the Congressional Research Service estimated that 42% of 11 million illegal immigrants living in the U.S. at the time overstayed a Visa.

In 1996, the U.S. Congress passed a law mandating an automated entry/exit system. However, it was never fully implemented.

The regulation stated that U.S. Customs and Border Protection uses facial recognition to verify all commercial air entry but only for exits in certain locations. CBP estimates a biometric system for entry-exit can be implemented in all commercial seaports and airports within three to five year. (Reporting Ted Hesson, Additional reporting David Shepardson, Editing Chris Sanders and Margueritachoy)

(source: Reuters)